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Session Submission Type: Paper Session
8:05am |
Partisan Media Drives Us to Think We Are Polarized. The association between political communication and perceived polarization on the foreign policy concerning the Russo-Ukraine war compared to the other domestic politics. - Jisoo Kim, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Michael W. Wagner, University of Wisconsin-Madison
8:15am |
Visual political polarization: How people look at political images and what they see - Olga Gasparyan, Florida State University; Elena Sirotkina, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
8:25am |
Misperceptions of Partisan Media Consumption and Their Consequences - Eunji Kim, Columbia University; Taylor Nicole Carlson, Washington University in St Louis
8:35am |
Is Partisanship Increasingly Salient when the Media Covers Supreme Court Justices? Evidence from the New York Times, 1970-2022. - Li Zhang, University of Virginia; Kevin Lynn Cope, University of Virginia
8:45am |
How Party Reputations Help Citizens Grasp What Is at Stake in Policy Debates - Love Christensen, Aarhus University; Rasmus Skytte, Aarhus University; Rune Slothuus, Aarhus University
9:05am |
Audience participation will last for the remainder of the session.