From a social science perspective, _____ measures how strongly someone weighs a particular value or belief
What is saliency?
Our socially-constructed form of common sense
What is doxa?
The reasoning goal that seeks to develop valid attitudes and understanding that are consistent with reality.
What is accuracy?
This specific emotional appeal is linked to the moral norms of society
What is guilt appeal?
When a rise in public opinion favoring the president following a crisis, typically a the international level.
What is rally event?
The process of being called into a certain aspect of your identity
What is interpellation?
Contemporary public opinion is an aggregate of individual and group preferences, but when a group is excluded, it is known as ____
What is disenfranchisement?
The reasoning goal that is close-minded and selective
What is defense?
This emotional appeal is based on people's desires for the future.
What is hope appeal?
Atrocity propaganda attempted to produce what form of intergroup emotion?
What is collective guilt?
The measures on the spectrum of manipulation weighing three degrees of propaganda
What is truth and transparency?
When people wall themselves off from alternative viewpoints by primarily consuming media of one viewpoint
What is selective exposure?
Portions of the American public ingesting or injecting themselves with disinfectants to cure covid because the President claim it would work is an example of what heuristic?
What is biased processing?
This theory holds that emotions are shared products of group life therefore we can experience emotions from an event that we didn't experience.
What is intergroup emotions theory?
This idea refers to the predominant norms of gender and sexual behavior.
What is heteronormativity?
The propaganda technique that selectively uses facts
What is card stacking?
Distrust in institutions influences whether certain groups will or will not participate in surveys. The surprising results of the 2016 presidential election were in part due to such distrust. This is known as ______ in polling.
What is nonresponse bias?
Selective exposure, biased processing, and disconfirmation bias are three common forms of ____ reasoning.
What is motivated?
The evolutionary perspective that considers emotions as mechanisms designed to solve adaptive issues.
What is discrete emotions approach?
The tenet of moral panics where the response to the concern is no longer corresponds to the real perceived level of concern.
What is disproportionality?
The genre of rhetoric whose temporality is future-oriented
What is epideitic
Agenda setting prioritizes certain events or issues. In order to control public opinion on these priorities, ______ is how the media and other entities present these issues to limit what and how the public thinks about them.
This headline exemplifies which of the three common forms of motivated reasoning? [New York Times, 9/25/21, Johnathan Weisman)
G.O.P. Fights Covid Mandates, Then Blames Biden as Cases Rise
Republicans have fought mask requirements and vaccine mandates for months, but as coronavirus infections again rise, they are blaming the president for failing to end the health crisis.
What is disconfirmation bias?
Let's use THON in this example. What perspective explains that the message features of THON, such as its slogan, "For the Kids," are important in invoking a particular emotion?
What is the theory of persuasive hope?
This element of visual rhetoric is concerned with the chose medium/form of how an event is being visually depicted (e.g pamphlet, film, photo)
What is production?