Skip to content

Current research

The Effects of Accuracy Salience and Affective Polarization on Truth Discernment in Online News Sharing (with the students in my 2021 Experiments in Politics seminar) [R&R at Research & Politics]

Losing Predicts Perceptions That Elections Were Decided by Fraud, but Margin of Loss and Candidate Race Do Not (with Cecile Tobin, Ben Aronson, Sharanya Majumder, Hannah Tanenbaum, Ethan Weber,
John M. Carey, Brian Fogarty, and Jason Reifler) [R&R at Electoral Studies]

Inoculation Discourages Consumption of News From Unreliable Sources, but Fails to Neutralize Misinformation (with Elizabeth Chun, Lilian Sweeney, and the students in my 2023 Experiments in Politics seminar) [under review]

Prebunking and Credible Source Corrections Increase Election Credibility: Evidence from the U.S. and Brazil (with John Carey, Brian Fogarty, Marília Gehrke, and Jason Reifler [under review]

Online Communitarian Appeals Increase Opposition to Violent Extremism (with Jason Lyall and Elsa Voytas) [under review]

State Media Tagging Does Not Affect Perceived Tweet Accuracy: Evidence from Twitter in 2022 (with the students in my 2022 Experiments in Politics seminar) [under review]

Do People Actually Learn From Fact-Checking? Evidence from a Longitudinal Study During the 2014 Campaign (with Jason Reifler)

Media coverage