Columbia Mailman School of Public Health: Political Polarization - Often Not as Bad as We Think
September 30, 2020
September 30, 2020
NEW YORK, Sept. 30 (TNSRes) -- Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health issued the following news:
As politics grows increasingly polarized, a new global study finds people often exaggerate political differences and negative feelings of those on the opposite side of the political divide, and this misperception can be reduced by informing them of the other side's true feelings. The study replicates earlier research in the United States, finding the phenomenon to be gener . . .
As politics grows increasingly polarized, a new global study finds people often exaggerate political differences and negative feelings of those on the opposite side of the political divide, and this misperception can be reduced by informing them of the other side's true feelings. The study replicates earlier research in the United States, finding the phenomenon to be gener . . .