http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2008-09/ru-paa091608.php

HOUSTON -- (Sept. 16, 2008) -- Is America's red-blue divide based on 
voters' physiology? A new paper in the journal Science, 
titled "Political Attitudes Are Predicted by Physiological Traits," 
explores the link.

Rice University's John Alford, associate professor of political 
science, co-authored the paper in the Sept. 19 issue of Science. 

Alford and his colleagues studied a group of 46 adult participants 
with strong political beliefs. Those individuals with "measurably 
lower physical sensitivities to sudden noises and threatening visual 
images were more likely to support foreign aid, liberal immigration 
policies, pacifism and gun control, whereas individuals displaying 
measurably higher physiological reactions to those same stimuli were 
more likely to favor defense spending, capital punishment, patriotism 
and the Iraq War," the authors wrote.

Participants were chosen randomly over the phone in Lincoln, Neb. 
Those expressing strong political views -- regardless of their 
content -- were asked to fill out a questionnaire on their political 
beliefs, personality traits and demographic characteristics. 

In a later session, they were attached to physiological measuring 
equipment and shown three threatening images (a very large spider on 
the face of a frightened person, a dazed individual with a bloody 
face and an open wound with maggots in it) interspersed among a 
sequence of 33 images. Similarly, participants also viewed three 
nonthreatening images (a bunny, a bowl of fruit and a happy child) 
placed within a series of other images. A second test used auditory 
stimuli to measure involuntary responses to a startling noise.

The researchers noted a correlation between those who reacted 
strongly to the stimuli and those who expressed support for "socially 
protective policies," which tend to be held by people "particularly 
concerned with protecting the interests of the participants' group, 
defined as the United States in mid-2007, from threats." These 
positions include support for military spending, warrantless 
searches, the death penalty, the Patriot Act, obedience, patriotism, 
the Iraq War, school prayer and Biblical truth, and opposition to 
pacifism, immigration, gun control, foreign aid, compromise, 
premarital sex, gay marriage, abortion rights and pornography.

The paper concluded, "Political attitudes vary with physiological 
traits linked to divergent manners of experiencing and processing 
environmental threats." This may help to explain "both the lack of 
malleability in the beliefs of individuals with strong political 
convictions and the associated ubiquity of political conflict," the 
authors said.


###
Alford's co-authors were Douglas R. Oxley, Kevin B. Smith, Jennifer 
L. Miller, John R. Hibbing and Mario Scalora, of the University of 
Nebraska; Matthew V. Hibbing, of the University of Illinois, Urbana-
Champaign; and Peter K. Hatemi, of the Virginia Institute for 
Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics.

Alford is available to members of the news media for comments on the 
paper. To speak with Alford, contact Franz Brotzen at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or 713-348-6775.



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