Does science fiction affect political fact? Yes and No: A survey experiment on "killer robots"

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Abstract

Some scholars suggest popular culture shapes public attitudes about foreign policy in ways that can affect real-world political outcomes, but relatively few studies test this proposition. We examine whether-and more importantly how-popular culture affects public opinion on foreign policy through a survey experiment on American attitudes toward fully autonomous weapons. We queried respondents about their consumption of popular culture-including a number of iconic science-fiction films featuring armed artificial intelligence (AI)-before or after questions about autonomous weapons.We find that science fiction "priming" exerts no independent effect on political attitudes, nor does referring to autonomous weapons as "killer robots." However, consumption of frightening armed AI films is associated with greater opposition to autonomous weapons. This "scifi literacy" effect increases for the highest consumers of science fiction if they are "primed" about popular culture before reporting their attitudes-what we call the "sci-fi geek effect." Our project advances current understanding of how popular culture affects public opinion on foreign policy and suggests avenues for further inquiry.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Young, K. L., & Carpenter, C. (2018). Does science fiction affect political fact? Yes and No: A survey experiment on “killer robots.” International Studies Quarterly, 62(3), 562–576. https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqy028

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