Television exposure and attitude change: The impact of political interest

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Abstract

A number of media effects studies have speculated that politically uninvolved individuals are susceptible to attitudinal or behavioral change as a result of media exposure. This possibility is investigated by testing a causal model of change in attitude toward President Nixon during the Watergate period (1972-1974). The initial analysis suggested that political interest was a source of interaction in the model; it was thus treated as a specifying variable by testing separate models for high and low interest respondents. Though exposure to Watergate-related television had no discernible impact on attitude toward Nixon for high interest individuals, it was the only significant predictor of 1974 Nixon attitude for persons with low political interest. © 1981 by The Trustees of Columbia University.

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Kazee, T. A. (1981). Television exposure and attitude change: The impact of political interest. Public Opinion Quarterly, 45(4), 507–518. https://doi.org/10.1086/268684

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