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Predicting Attitude Extremity: The Interactive Effects of Schema Development and the Need to Evaluate and Their Mediation by Evaluative Integration

Christopher M. Federico

University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, federico{at}umn.edu

Research on attitude extremity suggests that schemas containing more information about a particular attitude domain are more likely to be associated with extreme attitudes toward objects in that domain when perceivers’ responses toward features of the domain are evaluatively integrated. The present study argues that a high need to evaluate may play an important role in determining when schema development will be associated with the integrated responses to different domain features necessary for extremity. Consistent with this argument, data from a nationally representative survey of political attitudes indicated that the need to evaluate was associated with increased extremity across two different indices of the latter; that it moderated the relationships between schema development (in the form of political expertise), on one hand, and increased extremity and integration, on the other; and that the moderating effects of the need to evaluate vis-à-vis extremity were mediated by integration.

Key Words: attitude extremity • need to evaluate • political expertise • attitude structure

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 30, No. 10, 1281-1294 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0146167204263787


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Public Opin QHome page
C. M. Federico and M. C. Schneider
Political Expertise and the Use of Ideology: Moderating Effects of Evaluative Motivation
Public Opin Q, June 30, 2007; (2007) nfm010v1.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]