February 14, 2013
 
_Study Predicts Political Beliefs With 83  Percent Accuracy_ 
(http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/science/2013/02/study-predicts-political-beliefs-with-83-p
ercent-accuracy/) 

Posted By: _Marina  Koren_ 
(http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/science/author/korenm/)  

_smithsonianmag.com_ (http://smithsonianmag.com) 
 
If you want to know people’s politics, tradition said to_ study their 
parents_ 
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/14515/teens-stay-true-parents-political-perspectives.aspx)
 . In fact, the party affiliation of  someone’s parents can 
predict the child’s political leanings about around 70  percent of the time. 
But new research, _published yesterday_ 
(http://www.eurekalert.org/emb_releases/2013-02/uoe-tpi021113.php)  in the 
journal PLOS ONE, suggests  what mom 
and dad think isn’t the endgame when it comes to shaping a person’s  
political identity. Ideological differences between partisans may reflect  
distinct neural processes, and they can predict who’s right and who’s left of  
center with 82.9 percent accuracy, outperforming the “your parents pick your  
party” model. It also out-predicts another neural model based on differences 
in  brain structure, which distinguishes liberals from conservatives with 
71.6  percent accuracy. 
The _study _ (http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052970) matched 
publicly available party registration records  with the names of 82 American 
participants whose risk-taking behavior during a  gambling experiment was 
monitored by brain scans. The researchers found that  liberals and 
conservatives 
don’t differ in the risks they do or don’t take, but  their brain activity 
does vary while they’re making decisions. 
The idea that the brains of Democrats and Republicans may be hard-wired to  
their beliefs is not new. _Previous research_ 
(http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/11/121101105003.htm)  has shown that 
during MRI scans, areas  
linked to broad social connectedness, which involves friends and the world 
at  large, light up in Democrats’ brains. Republicans, on the other hand, 
show more  neural activity in parts of the brain associated with tight social  
connectedness, which focuses on family and country. 
Other scans _have shown_ 
(http://www.cell.com/current-biology/abstract/S0960-9822(11)00289-2)  that 
brain regions associated with risk and  
uncertainty, such as the fear-processing _amygdala_ 
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amygdala) , differ  in structure in liberals and 
conservatives. And different 
architecture _means different behavior_ 
(https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:Thlyte2KGgsJ:faculty.virginia.edu/haidtlab/jost.glaser.political-conserv
atism-as-motivated-social-cog.pdf+&hl=en&gl=us&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESgji7ys_4Ni
ihFPsfVp6kyc5dyWLvHl_38BmAQiZ4LiA4brEU81IQjdDwbFNlr52J-7txe-FRePNgGQFtlosh0-
fHFp0DHtg_RTEL6a9zvRAMS-NgDIXEsTUdIVoOonaYpcQu0D&sig=AHIEtbR-JaQdCAKCUEecCnn
2dw5jpIkzHA) . Liberals tend to seek out novelty  and uncertainty, while 
conservatives exhibit strong changes in attitude to  threatening situations. 
The former are _more willing_ 
(http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=7418028)
  to accept risk, while the latter tends 
to have  more intense _physical reactions_ 
(http://www.sciencemag.org/content/321/5896/1667)  to threatening stimuli. 
Building on this, the new research shows that Democrats exhibited  
significantly greater activity in the left insula, a region associated with  
social 
and self-awareness, during the task. Republicans, however, showed  
significantly greater activity in the right amygdala, a region involved in our  
fight-or flight response system. 
“If you went to Vegas, you won’t be able to tell who’s a Democrat or who’
s a  Republican, but the fact that being a Republican changes how your brain 
 processes risk and gambling is really fascinating,” says lead researcher 
_Darren  Schreiber_ (http://exeter.academia.edu/DarrenSchreiber) , a 
University of Exeter professor who’s currently teaching at  Central European 
University in Budapest. “It suggests that politics alters our  worldview and 
alters 
the way our brains process.” 
Politics isn’t the first to cause structural changes in the brain. More 
than  a decade ago, _researchers used brain scans_ 
(http://www.pnas.org/content/97/8/4398)  to show that London cab drivers’  gray 
matter grew larger to 
help them store a mental map of the city. There more  time they spent on the 
road, the bigger their _hippocampi_ 
(http://www.news-medical.net/health/Hippocampus-What-is-the-Hippocampus.aspx) , 
an area associated with navigation, 
became. 
This implies that despite the political leanings seen through our brains, 
how  we vote—and thus the cause of our political affiliations—may not be set 
in  stone, Schreiber says. 
“If we believe that we’re hardwired for our political views, then it’s 
really  easy for me to discount in you in a conversation. ‘Oh, you’re just a  
conservative because you have a red brain,’ or ‘Oh, you’re a liberal 
because you  have a blue brain,’” Schreiber explains. “But that’s just not the 
case. The  brain changes. The brain is dynamic.”


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