| Literature DB >> 29795642 |
Burak Oc1, Celia Moore2, Michael R Bashshur3.
Abstract
The outcome of the 2016 U.S. Presidential election was a big surprise to many, as the majority of polls had predicted the opposite outcome. In this two-stage cross-sectional study, we focus on how Democrats and Republicans reacted to this electoral surprise and how these reactions might have influenced the way they allocated resources to each other in small groups. We find that, before the election, Republicans showed greater in-group favoritism than Democrats, who treated others equally, regardless of their political affiliation. We then show that Democrats experienced the election outcome as an ego shock and, in the week following the election, reported significantly higher levels of negative emotions and lower levels of self-esteem than Republicans. These reactions then predicted how individuals' decided to allocate resources to others: after the election, Republicans no longer showed in-group favoritism, while Democrats showed out-group derogation. We find these decisions when the tables were turned can be partially explained by differences in participants' state self-esteem.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29795642 PMCID: PMC5967817 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197848
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographics of participants before and after the election.
| Before the election | After the election | Statistical difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 48% female | 49% female | ||
| 33.60 | 35.91 | ||
| Caucasian | 85 | 74 | |
| African American | 6 | 9 | |
| Asian | 5 | 11 | |
| Hispanic | 4 | 6 | |
| Post-graduate & graduate degrees | 18 | 21 | |
| Four year college degrees | 41 | 43 | |
| Two year college degrees and lower | 42 | 37 | |
| 64 | 62 | ||
| 53% Democrats | 54% Democrats |
Descriptive statistics and correlations.
| M | SD | (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Time | .50 | .50 | - | |||||
| (2) Political party affiliation | .53 | .50 | .00 | - | ||||
| (3) Group composition | .33 | .47 | .01 | -.01 | - | |||
| (4) State self-esteem | 3.77 | .77 | . | -.20 | -.13 | - | ||
| (5) Party identification | 5.18 | 1.29 | . | .17 | -.05 | .05 | - | |
| (6) Allocation to group | 46.13 | 30.31 | -.02 | .11 | -.12 | .06 | .08 | - |
Note. N = 404 for all variables except state self-esteem and party identification, which we only collected at time 2 and for which N = 200. Time dummy coded: 0 = Before the election, 1 = After the election, Political party affiliation dummy coded: 0 = Republican Party, 1 = Democratic Party. Group composition dummy coded: 0 = When recipients are majority in-group, 1 = When recipients are majority out-group. Correlations greater than |.10| are statistically significant at p < .05, two-tailed.
Fig 1The relative distribution of resource allocations to others (A) before and (B) after the election.
Fig 2Amount allocated by (A) Republicans and (B) Democrats before and after the election.
Fig 3Participants’ affective and cognitive reactions after the election results were announced.
Error bars indicate standard errors.
Conditional indirect effects of political affiliation on allocation to others via state self-esteem as a function of group composition.
| State self-esteem | Allocation to others | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Constant | 3.93 | .08 | .000 | 60.88 | 13.95 | .000 |
| Political party affiliation | -.31 | .11 | .004 | 7.42 | 4.17 | .077 |
| State self-esteem (SSE) | -4.18 | 3.46 | .229 | |||
| Group composition (GC) | -70.50 | 20.52 | .001 | |||
| SSE X GC | 16.52 | 5.40 | .003 | |||
| .04 | .08 | |||||
| Conditional indirect effect of political affiliation on allocation | 95% CI | |||||
| When majority in-group | 1.31 | 1.25 | [-.57, 4.60] | |||
| When majority out-group | -3.87 | 1.86 | [-8.41, -.96] | |||
Note. N = 200. Political party affiliation dummy coded: 0 = Republican Party, 1 = Democratic Party. Group composition dummy coded: 0 = When recipients are majority in-group, 1 = When recipients are majority out-group.
Fig 4Two-way interaction between state self-esteem and group composition.
Conditional indirect effects of political affiliation on allocation to others via state self-esteem as a function of group composition and political party identification.
| State self-esteem | Allocation to others | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Constant | 3.93 | .08 | .000 | 112.83 | 58.13 | .04 |
| Political party affiliation | -.31 | .11 | .004 | 7.83 | 4.32 | .07 |
| State self-esteem (SSE) | -20.14 | 14.71 | .17 | |||
| Group composition (GC) | -103.20 | 85.67 | .23 | |||
| Party Identification (PI) | -9.59 | 10.67 | .37 | |||
| SSE x GC | 5.63 | 16.08 | .73 | |||
| SSE x PI | 28.06 | 22.49 | .21 | |||
| GC x PI | 2.94 | 2.67 | .27 | |||
| SSE X GC x PI | -2.04 | 4.21 | .63 | |||
| .04 | .09 | |||||
| Conditional indirect effect of political affiliation on allocation | 95% CI | |||||
| When majority in-group | ||||||
| Party identification = -1SD | 2.73 | 1.96 | [-.22, 7.60] | |||
| Party identification = Mean | 1.53 | 1.30 | [-.47, 5.00] | |||
| Party identification = +1SD | .35 | 1.54 | [-2.61, 3.71] | |||
| When majority out-group | ||||||
| Party identification = -1SD | -3.59 | 2.49 | [-9.54, .73] | |||
| Party identification = Mean | -3.95 | 1.91 | [-8.60, -1.09] | |||
| Party identification = +1SD | -4.31 | 2.33 | [-9.55, -.33] | |||
Note. N = 200. Political party affiliation dummy coded: 0 = Republican Party, 1 = Democratic Party. Group composition dummy coded: 1 = When recipients are majority out-group, 0 = When recipients are majority in-group.