The general fault in our fault lines

  • Kai Ruggeri*
  • , Bojana Veckalov
  • , Lana Bojanic
  • , Thomas L. Andersen
  • , Sarah Ashcroft-Jones
  • , Nelida Ayacaxli
  • , Paula Barea-Arroyo
  • , Mari Louise Berge
  • , Ludvig D. Bjorndal
  • , Asli Bursalioglu
  • , Vanessa Buhler
  • , Martin Cadek
  • , Melis cetincelik
  • , Georgia Clay
  • , Anna Cortijos-Bernabeu
  • , Kaja Damnjanovic
  • , Tatianna M. Dugue
  • , Maya Esberg
  • , Celia Esteban-Serna
  • , Ezra N. Felder
  • Maja Friedemann, Darianna I. Frontera-Villanueva, Patricia Gale, Eduardo Garcia-Garzon, Sandra J. Geiger, Leya George, Allegra Girardello, Aleksandra Gracheva, Anastasia Gracheva, Marquis Guillory, Marlene Hecht, Katharina Herte, Barbora Hubena, William Ingalls, Lea Jakob, Margo Janssens, Hannes Jarke, Ondrej Kacha, Kalina Nikolova Kalinova, Ralitsa Karakasheva, Peggah R. Khorrami, Zan Lep, Samuel Lins, Ingvild S. Lofthus, Salome Mamede, Silvana Mareva, Mafalda F. Mascarenhas, Lucy McGill, Sara Morales-Izquierdo, Bettina Moltrecht, Tasja S. Mueller, Marzia Musetti, Joakim Nelsson, Thiago Otto, Alessandro F. Paul, Irena Pavlovic, Marija B. Petrovic, Dora Popovic, Gerhard M. Prinz, Josip Razum, Ivaylo Sakelariev, Vivian Samuels, Ines Sanguino, Nicolas Say, Jakob Schuck, Irem Soysal, Anna Louise Todsen, Markus R. Tunte, Milica Vdovic, Jachym Vintr, Maja Vovko, Marek A. Vranka, Lisa Wagner, Lauren Wilkins, Manou Willems, Elizabeth Wisdom, Aleksandra Yosifova, Sandy Zeng, Mahmoud A. Ahmed, Twinkle Dwarkanath, Mina Cikara, Jeffrey Lees, Tomas Folke
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

102 Citations (Scopus)
221 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Ruggeri et al. tested perceptions of opposing political party members in 10,207 participants from 26 countries. Results show that beliefs about others are overly negative but could be more realistic with transparency about actual group beliefs.

Pervading global narratives suggest that political polarization is increasing, yet the accuracy of such group meta-perceptions has been drawn into question. A recent US study suggests that these beliefs are inaccurate and drive polarized beliefs about out-groups. However, it also found that informing people of inaccuracies reduces those negative beliefs. In this work, we explore whether these results generalize to other countries. To achieve this, we replicate two of the original experiments with 10,207 participants across 26 countries. We focus on local group divisions, which we refer to as fault lines. We find broad generalizability for both inaccurate meta-perceptions and reduced negative motive attribution through a simple disclosure intervention. We conclude that inaccurate and negative group meta-perceptions are exhibited in myriad contexts and that informing individuals of their misperceptions can yield positive benefits for intergroup relations. Such generalizability highlights a robust phenomenon with implications for political discourse worldwide.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1369-1380
Number of pages12
JournalNature Human Behaviour
Volume5
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct-2021

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