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Taylor N. Carlson
Taylor N. Carlson
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Washington University in St. Louis
Adresse e-mail validée de wustl.edu - Page d'accueil
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What to believe? Social media commentary and belief in misinformation
NM Anspach, TN Carlson
Political Behavior 42 (3), 697-718, 2020
1182020
Opting out of political discussions
JE Settle, TN Carlson
Political Communication 36 (3), 476-496, 2019
762019
Political chameleons: An exploration of conformity in political discussions
TN Carlson, JE Settle
Political Behavior 38, 817-859, 2016
682016
Through the grapevine: Informational consequences of interpersonal political communication
TN Carlson
American Political Science Review 113 (2), 325-339, 2019
642019
Modeling political information transmission as a game of telephone
TN Carlson
The Journal of Politics 80 (1), 348-352, 2018
322018
What goes without saying
TN Carlson, JE Settle
Cambridge University Press, 2022
282022
Follow your heart: Could psychophysiology be associated with political discussion network homogeneity?
TN Carlson, CT McClean, JE Settle
Political Psychology 41 (1), 165-187, 2020
142020
Political psychophysiology: A primer for interested researchers and consumers
JE Settle, MV Hibbing, NM Anspach, TN Carlson, CM Coe, E Hernandez, ...
Politics and the Life Sciences 39 (1), 101-117, 2020
132020
Talking Politics: Political Discussion Networks and the New American Electorate
TN Carlson, M Abrajano, LG Bedolla
Oxford University Press, 2020
122020
Experimental measurement of misperception in political beliefs
TN Carlson, SJ Hill
Journal of Experimental Political Science 9 (2), 241-254, 2022
102022
Political discussion networks and political engagement among voters of color
TN Carlson, M Abrajano, L Garcia Bedolla
Political Research Quarterly 73 (1), 79-95, 2020
102020
The similar and distinct effects of political and non-political conversation on affective polarization
E Rossiter, T Carlson
Working paper, 2023
42023
When campaigns call, who answers? Using observational data to enrich our understanding of phone mobilization
M Abrajano, TN Carlson, LG Bedolla, S Oklobdzija, S Turney
Electoral Studies 64, 102025, 2020
42020
Cross-partisan conversation reduced affective polarization for republicans and democrats even after the contentious 2020 election
EL Rossiter, TN Carlson
22023
Not who you think? Exposure and vulnerability to misinformation
NM Anspach, TN Carlson
New Media & Society, 14614448221130422, 2022
22022
Through the Grapevine: Socially Transmitted Information and Distorted Democracy
TN Carlson
University of Chicago Press, 2024
12024
Through the Grapevine: Informational Consequences of the Two-Step Flow of Political Communication
TN Carlson
American Political Science Review, 2019
12019
CueAnon: What QAnon Signals about Congressional Candidates and What it Costs Them
BS Noble, TN Carlson
2023
Persuasion in Parallel: How Information Changes Minds about Politics. By Alexander Coppock. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2022. 216p. 34.99 paper.
TN Carlson
Perspectives on Politics 21 (3), 1087-1088, 2023
2023
To Discuss or Not to Discuss? How Selective Exposure to Political Discussion Conditions Experimental Findings on Polarization
T Carlson, E Rossiter
OSF, 2023
2023
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