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Investigating whether group status modulates the relationship between individual differences in epistemic motivation and political conservatism
Affiliation:1. University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States of America;2. Tilburg University, the Netherlands;1. Department of Psychology, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Germany;2. Faculty of Natural Sciences, MSB Medical School Berlin, Berlin, Germany;3. Department of Psychology, Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane, Neuruppin, Germany
Abstract:Previous research has found that individual differences in epistemic motivation predict political conservatism. However, meta-analyses indicate substantial heterogeneity in this association and such variation remains underexamined. Using a large, pre-existing dataset, we investigated whether group status—a group’s social value—modulates this relationship. We used several assessments of epistemic motivation (need for structure, need for cognition) and group status (race, gender, social class). We found that the epistemic motivation-ideology relationship was stronger for women (versus men) and for members of lower (versus higher) social class groups, although the relationship strength differences were relatively small. The relationship did not consistently vary across racial group status. Group status appears to be a small, but not consistent, moderator of the epistemic motivation-ideology relationship.
Keywords:Political ideology  Epistemic motivation  Group status  AIID
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