|
ZHUJ DEBATES 93 RTVJ Images vs. Issues in Presidential Debates Does the Audience Learn More about Images than Issues from Televised Debates? Effects of the First 1992 Presidential Debate Jian-Hua Zhu, J. Ronald Milavsky and Rahul Biswas Dept. of Communication Sciences University of Connecticut Storrs, CT 06226 Paper Submitted to the Radio and Television Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, April 1, 1993 ABSTRACT This paper reviews all previous studies of debate effects on issue learning and image formation, and reports the results of a new study of the effects of the first presidential debate in the 1992 election. The study used a between-subjects design with repeated measures. The study was replicated under both experimental and natural viewing conditions. Results show that the viewers learned a great deal about candidates' issue positions that were discussed in the debate, but no learning took place of issues that were not debated. The debate did not affect the viewers' perception of the two well-known candidates' personalities, but improved the perception of the less well- known candidate, Ross Perot, on several debate-related personality traits. Does the audience of televised presidential debates learn more about candidates' personal characteristics than their issue positions? The answer to this question has important implications for the political process. According to the classic theory of democracy, a televised debate contributes positively to the democratic process when it increases the electorate's rational decision-making by informing them about issues and where the candidates stand on them. On the other hand, the debate makes a negative contribution to the extent that it leads to greater learning about candidates' personalities than it does about their stands on issues. This latter function of debates has been criticized since 1960 when presidential debates were first televised. Based on his observation of the 1960 debates between Kennedy and Nixon, Lubell (1962) believed that many voters could not process the complicated issues discussed in the debates, so they "settled back and judged the debates as a personality contest" (p. 153). He concluded that televised debates, a novel format at the time, threatened the established political process because "the debates tend to lessen somewhat the importance of issues and party and to elevate the significance of personality, particularly on its theatrical side" (p. 152). This view has been echoed by other critics of debates (e.g., Lanoue and Schrott, 1991). LITERATURE REVIEW To determine how much such criticism is supported by empirical research, we have conducted a comprehensive, and quantitative review of the debate literature. Among all the published studies of presidential debates we could locate, 35 appear to be relevant according to our selection criteria: (1) using exposure to the debate as an independent variable and (2) treating issue learning and image formation as dependent variables. A number of studies, although containing measures of issue learning and/or image formation, were excluded from this review because they either used issue/image as independent variables, or did not include debate viewing as an independent variable. Table 1 summarizes the major features of these studies (the bibliographical list is reported in Appendix A). -------------------- Table 1 about here -------------------- Overall Trends in Debate Research Column 1 of Table 1 reveals several overall trends in debate effects research. The data show clearly that most of what is now known about debate effects came from studies of the first televised presidential debates in the 1960 election, and from the debates in the 1976 election. The latter election inspired the most debate effects studies, with 19 studies. Each of the three elections in the 1980s inspired only 4 or fewer studies. The increasing importance of the media, particularly television, in election campaigns calls for continued study of media effects. The new study, reported below, was designed to determine if effects found in earlier studies replicate under current conditions and to contribute further understanding of the role of debates in elections. Most of the studies reviewed were drawn from either geographically local adult (16 studies) or college student populations (13). Only four studies were based on national general public samples. Two studies used selected respondents, such as members of the League of Women Voters (Nimmo et al., 1980), or females living in married-student houses (Tannenbaum et al., 1962). The sample size was generally small or medium, with the median being about 200. A quarter of the studies had 400 or more subjects or respondents, and a similar proportion had 100 or fewer. An overwhelming majority (31) of the studies focused on the debates during the general election campaign. Only four dealt with primary debates. This concentration on general debates was somewhat compensated by the fact that most studies (28) examined the first debate in a campaign, which has been found to have greater impact than the subsequent debates (e.g., L. Becker et al., 1980). Methodologically, many studies share several common features. Most studies (26) used surveys to collect data, and only six were based on experimental designs in which exposure was controlled or manipulated. Only 3 of these (Hawkins, et al. 1979; Lemert et al., 1983; Pfau, 1987) used a random procedure to assign subjects to groups. Three studies (Bothwell and Brigham, 1983; Lang and Lang, 1979, 1980) combined both survey and experimental design features. From a research standpoint, televised debates have one advantage over other campaign formats (e.g., news coverage and political advertising): debates are always a distinct event with an easily defined beginning and end, whereas news stories and campaign commercials are continuously unfolding throughout the entire campaign. Most of the debate studies (30) apparently took advantage of this by using a before-after design. Still there were five studies using an after-only design, in which cases the impact of a debate would be confounded by the audience's prior knowledge or attitudes. Confounding problems may also exist among the 30 studies with a before-after design. About one third of them (9) did not measure whether the audience actually watched a debate. By comparing issue/image scores measured before and after a debate, some studies basically assumed that the debate was the single source of the change, or lack of it.1 Such an inference is especially problematic when the two points of measurement were one week or more apart (e.g., L. Becker et al. 1979; Hagner and Rieselbach, 1980). An equally critical problem of confounding effects is that three-quarters (23) of the before-after studies did not include a control group (i.e., nonviewers of a debate). Most of these studies administered a pre-test a few days in advance (to offset any sensitization effect), and a post-test right after the debate (to eliminate post-debate influences). However, the audience might still be influenced by other sources of campaign information between the pre- and post-tests. This "contaminated learning" effect can be controlled by comparing change scores between viewers and nonviewers. Only seven studies did so, however.2 Another general weakness of the studies under review is the failure to link the audience's responses to actual debate content. Like other communication events, some debates can be linked to specific messages presented in the debate while others may not have any specific debate message references. In general, content-specific effects should be given more weight, because they are more interpretable and less subject to confounding influences. In addition, references to specific messages in a debate can be found readily, either by reading a transcript or reviewing visual tape. Unfortunately, only 7 out of the 35 studies took advantage of this. Without considering the original debate content, the remaining studies used a variety of other measures, which are more subjective (to be discussed below), to assess debate effects. Variants of Issue/Image Measures Even though we used a fairly narrow definition of debate effects to select the 35 studies, there were still diverse measures of issue learning and image formation in these studies. We have identified at least 7 variants of issue learning, 4 variants of image formation, and 4 variants of other attitudinal effects. The variants of issue learning include issue knowledge (i.e., the audience's judgment of a candidate's issue position, the accuracy of which can be verified with actual debate content); issue opinion (a subjective measure of the audience's own views on an issue); issue congruency (the similarity between the audience's own position on an issue and a candidate's position on the issue as perceived by the audience); issue discrimination (the difference between the perceived positions take by two or more candidates); audience's issue salience (the audience's own perception of the importance of an issue, which is a standard agenda-setting question), candidate's issue salience (the audience's perceived issue importance to a candidate), and issue-salience congruency (the distance between the audience's own issue salience and his/her perceived candidate issue-salience). The variants of image formation are image perception (the audience's rating of a candidate on certain personality traits), image congruency (the difference between the perceived image of a candidate and the perceived ideal president), image discrimination (the difference in the perceived traits of two or image salience (the audience's perceived importance of certain traits of a candidate to his/her vote decision). In addition, many of the studies also measured other attitudinal effects of watching a debate, such as affective response toward a candidate, candidate choice, intention to vote, and interest in the campaign. It turned out that 21 studies had at least one issue measure and 27 had at least one image measure. Two studies (Lang and Lang, 1979; McLeod et al., 1979) measured three or more variants of issue learning, and another two studies (Miller and MacKuen, 1979; Tannenbaum et al. 1962) had three image measures. Overall, four measures stood out as the most frequently used: image perception (by 23 studies), issue discrimination (9), issue knowledge (8), and image discrimination (6). Two of these measures, issue discrimination and image discrimination, deserve further consideration, because we believe that they were inappropriately used in studies of presidential debates. The theory behind the two discrimination measures is that an informed citizenry rests on "cognitive discrimination ability" to distinguish two candidates' positions or personalities (Choi and Becker, 1987; Clarke and Kline, 1974), and that a televised debate is effective if it helps polarize two candidates in the audience's mind (Miller and MacKuen, 1979). When applying the theory to presidential debates, these studies implicitly made two strong assumptions: First, that the two competing candidates indeed have clear-cut differences in issue positions. Second, that the audience's perception of two candidates' personalities is a "zero-sum" process in which the rise of one's image is always at the price of the competing candidate. Both assumptions are questionable in light of empirical evidence. In media-dominated modern politics, viable presidential candidates have to be middle-of-the-road to appeal to a large base of constituents. Consequently, the major candidates tend to share some similar centrist positions. As will be described in detail later, we found in the 1992 election that the three major candidates had similar stands on a number of issues. For example, they all favored retraining defense industry workers and opposed sending troops to Bosnia. It is possible that an audience guesses where a candidate stands on some issues based on general assumptions about such matters as the candidate's party affiliation or past record. Such guesses might lead to the belief that the candidates are farther apart than they really are. This would show up in a pre-debate study as large (but false) issue discrimination. After the debate in which candidates discuss the issue, the similarity of their position becomes better known, and the post-debate measures accurately show a decrease in issue-discrimination. Positing issue discrimination as a theoretical debate objective would lead to the conclusion that the debate failed to educate, when it in fact did. In addition, there also has been ample evidence from the debate literature that all candidates usually improve their images among the audience in the same debate (e.g., Simons and Leibowitz, 1979). Based on such findings, Lanoue and Schrott (1991, p. 120) concluded that the audience formed images of each candidate in a non-zero sum manner. For this reason, too, a televised debate could lead to convergent, rather than polarized, images of candidates, which again would be considered a non- or failed-effect within the discrimination ability theory framework. Debate Impact on Issue Knowledge and Image Perception Because of these problems, we decided to focus on issue knowledge and image perception. Both are direct measures of debate effects. The accuracy of issue knowledge also can be objectively verified by reference to debate content. Therefore, they have higher validity than the discrimination measures. Our analysis of previous studies shows that issue knowledge has been used in only 8 of the 35 studies, compared to 23 which measured image perception. Columns 2 and 3 in Table 1 display a comparison of these studies. A few common features emerge from both issue knowledge studies and image perception studies: Both were more likely to use local adult and student samples, and were also more likely to focus on the first debate in the general election. These similarities were outnumbered by the differences between the two, however. One difference lies in an overall trend. While image perception studies were done in most elections, recent studies (1980 and thereafter) were more likely to include issue knowledge. This is in line with the general trend in mass communication research toward paying more attention to cognitive effects (Severin and Tankard, 1992). The two types of studies appear to be quite different on several methodological dimensions. For example, the studies of issue knowledge were more balanced between survey and experiment (4 vs. 4) than the studies of image perception (20 vs. 3 in favor of survey). Exposure was measured in all studies of issue knowledge, but only in 14 out of 23 studies of image perception. Half of the issue knowledge studies included a control group (i.e., nonviewers), while the control group was used by only a quarter of image perception studies. Three studies of issue knowledge compared the audience's responses to actual debate content, but none of image perception studies attempted to do so (of course, image-related content is more difficult to trace). The only strength that image perception studies have over issue knowledge studies is that the former are more likely to use before-after design than the latter. Overall, then, the studies of issue knowledge appear, though fewer, to be based on firmer methodological ground than the studies of image perception. With these methodological differences in mind, let us take a look at the relative effects televised debates have had on issue knowledge and image perception. Because of the diverse measurements and analyses used in these studies, we developed a classification scheme to categorize the debate effects found. The effects are considered "substantial/clear" if exposure to a debate (or its surrogate such as time) produces statistically significant, and consistent (in the case of multiple analyses), effects on issue knowledge or image perception. The effects are coded "none" if exposure is consistently nonsignificant. Many studies turned out to lie in between, and are labelled "moderate" in effect size, "mixed" across analyses, or "maybe" if the original author(s) only provided speculative descriptions. According to this classification, 3 of the 8 issue knowledge studies found televised debates to have substantial/clear effects, and 4 other knowledge studies found moderate/mixed effects. On the other hand, substantial effects were found in 5 out of 23 image perception studies, and moderate/mixed effects were found in another 10 image studies. Note that not all these studies examined debate effects on issue knowledge and image perception simultaneously. In fact, only 5 studies included measures of both issue knowledge and image perception. Of them, three (L. Becker et al., 1980; Drew and Weaver, 1991; McLeod et al. 1979) reported that the impact of exposure to a debate was greater on issue knowledge than on image perception. One study (Lang and Lang, 1979) found the debate impact between issue knowledge and image perception to be similar. In only one study (Carter, 1962), a debate was found to produce a greater impact on image perception than on issue knowledge. Summary Several generalizations have emerged from this quantitative review of the debate effects research literature: First, the direct evidence is quite limited about the relative impact of televised debates on issue learning versus image formation, because most of the studies either have used inappropriate measures of the two effects, or have not compared the two simultaneously. The five studies that did conduct direct comparisons suggest that issue knowledge learning is greater than image perception formation. The findings are inconclusive, however, given the small number of studies and the methodological weaknesses mentioned above. Based on almost the same literature reviewed here, Lanoue and Schrott (1991, p. 96) concluded that "In reality, though, viewers are far more likely to use debates to gain insight into each candidate's personality and character. ... a superior 'personal' presentation appears to be more important to voters than accumulation of issue-oriented debating 'points'." Our analysis suggests that this generalization is at best only very weakly supported by the existing data, if at all. This literature review also suggests several ways to improve studies of debate effects. Specifically, there appear to be four criteria for a minimally necessary and sufficient test of debate effects on issue knowledge and image perception: (1) the basic design should be a between-subjects design contrasting viewers and nonviewers, (2) the dependent variables should be measured both pre- and post-debate, (3) the results should be verified with content analysis of the debate to ascertain content-specific effects, and (4) the data should be collected from both the forced viewing condition (experiment, to assure that exposure does take place) and the natural viewing condition (survey, to offset laboratory artifacts). Some of these issues have been noted by Joslyn (1984) and Lanoue and Schrott (1991) as well. The study reported below was designed based on these requirements. METHOD Subjects The context of this study was the first 1992 presidential debate between George Bush, Bill Clinton, and Ross Perot, which took place on October 11, 1992. The subjects are 185 undergraduate students enrolled in introductory courses in communication and public speaking at a state university in Connecticut.3 The students received class credits for participation in the experiment. Slightly more than half of the subjects (58%) were female. Roughly one third were freshmen, one third sophomores and the remaining juniors or seniors. About half of them had either a part-time or full-time job. As in many other experimental studies using student subjects, our student sample does not represent the general population. However, the resulting data suggest that our student sample is comparable to the general electorate in several important aspects. For example, 32% of the students described themselves as "very interested," 54% "moderately interested" and 13% "not interested" in national politics. These proportion are comparable to a national survey done during the same period.4 Likewise, 77% of the students said that they had registered to vote in the election, and 83% of these intended to vote, as compared to about 80% of the general population being "likely voters," defined somewhat differently by various national pollsters in early October, 1992.5 The proportion of Democrats, Republicans, or Independents among the students is similar to the pattern among the general public in Connecticut.6 In addition, the students' knowledge about candidates' issue positions, one of the key variables under study, was similar to the national level. Before the debate, the students answered correctly, on the average, 29% of 21 knowledge questions about the three candidates' issue positions. This knowledge score was very close to the 32% correct rate of all knowledge questions, or 27% of "non-trivial" questions, reported by Justin Lewis and Michael Morgan (1992) based on their nationwide sample interviewed in the same period. Procedure During the recruitment, the study was described as an "election" study. The debate was not specifically referred to in any way. The students were asked to participate in two sessions, three to five days apart. The first session (pre- test) was held between October 7 and 9, two to four days prior to the debate . The subjects came at a time of their choice to answer the pre-test questionnaire (to be described in the measurement section), which lasted about 20 minutes. The post-test took place either on Sunday evening, October 11 when the debate aired, or throughout the following day. According to their appointment made before the pre-test, 53 students came to the post-test on October 11. The first time students became aware that the presidential debate was involved in the study was upon arrival for the second session when they were asked to watch the 90-minute long telecast. Right after the debate, they answered the post-test questionnaire, which was identical to the pre-test. This group of 53 will be called "experimental viewers." When the remaining 132 subjects arrived next day, we first asked them a series of filter questions to determine whether they had watched the debate on TV, listened to it on radio at their own initiation, or had watched, heard or read any news reports about the debate. Roughly half of them (65) had watched or listened to the debate,7 while the other half (67) had neither watched nor been exposed to news about the debate. We randomly assigned, in a ratio of 2 to 1, the uncontaminated subjects into a newspaper group (46) and a control group (21). The newspaper group was asked to read the full transcript of the debate printed in The New York Times of the day, while the control group was not. Both groups then completed the post-test questionnaire. The newspaper group was included for another purpose unrelated to the current study, and will be excluded from the analysis reported below. The basic analysis will compare the experimental group with the "uncontaminated" control group. For convenience, we will call the members of the control group "nonviewers." The "contaminated" subjects who had watched the debate on the previous evening at their homes or dormitories also answered the post-test questionnaire. They will be labeled "natural viewers." In the filter-questions, we asked them to indicate which of six 15-minute segments of the debate they watched, and which other activities they engaged in while watching, from which we derived a measure of attention to the debate. These questions were later combined to form an exposure measure. The experimental subjects and the natural subjects were analyzed separately. Thus the analysis of natural viewers provides an independent check on the effects of experimental manipulation. It should be noted that the assignment to the initial experimental exposure condition was not strictly random. At the beginning of the study, each subject was asked to choose a time for both pre- and post-tests. While the selection of the pre- test sessions did not affect the outcome at all, the choice of October 11 for the post-test session determined placement in the experimental viewing condition, while the choice of October 12 placed them in either the newspaper, control, or natural viewing conditions. Of course, no subject was aware of this because the sign-up occurred long before they even came to the pre-test, and in addition, the subjects had no way of knowing that the debate was involved at all. Therefore, such assignment can be called a "blind self-selection" procedure, as opposed to the "conscious self-selection" procedure used in almost all previous experimental studies in which the subjects were told that a debate was being studied and allowed to choose a session to attend. However, there was still a possibility of systematic selection biases. To detect these, we compared various pre-test items between experimental viewers, nonviewers and natural viewers. Since the pre-test was taken prior to exposure to the stimulus (i.e., the debate), significant difference in the pre- test scores among these groups would indicate a biased assignment. Otherwise, we could reasonably assume no systematic bias involved in the assignment, and any significant difference detected in the post-test could be attributed to the stimulus. -------------------- Table 2 about here -------------------- As shown in Table 2, except for political interest, we did not find any significant difference among the three groups, or between any pair of them, in every important characteristics in the pre-test. The subject's sex, class standing, party affiliation, election participation, and media use habits were similar across groups. The groups differed on political interest, however, with the natural viewers being most interested in national politics, which explains at least in part why they voluntarily watched the debate. Therefore, political interest was controlled in the final analysis. In addition, since there was the possibility of contingent effects, other variables, such gender, employment, and party affiliation, were also introduced into the final analysis as control variables. Equally similar were their scores on the key dependent variables (to be described later): knowledge of candidates' issue positions, perception of candidates' characteristics, and vote preference. The only exception among the 21 comparison is the perception of Perot's communication style, in which the natural viewers scored significantly higher than the other two groups. This did not affect the final results because we only compared experimental viewers with nonviewers, or heavy natural viewers with light natural viewers. Measures As mentioned above, pre- and post-test questionnaires contained a set of identical questions, which could be divided into four sections: (1) perception of candidates' characteristics; (2) knowledge of candidates' issue positions, (3) rating of the salience of election issues and the candidates' performance on these issues, and (4) the subject's personal background information. Because section 3 will not be used for the current study, and section 4 is self explanatory, we will describe below only the first two sections. Issue knowledge. To test the effects of all specific messages presented in the debate on the subject's knowledge, we would have had to know in advance exactly what issues would come up in the debate, which was of course impossible. After consulting various election news reports, we complied a list of 24 "most-likely-to-be-debated" items for both pre- and post- tests. These items asked the subject to indicate whether a candidate supported, opposed, or had no position on 24 specific policy issues. The same 24 items were asked for Bush, Clinton, and Perot, respectively. Therefore, the total number of issue knowledge items is 72 (24 items by 3 candidates). For obvious reasons, we did not anticipate that all three candidates would discuss all these issues. On the contrary, it would increase the power of the study if a portion of the issues would not be addressed. It would enable examination of differences between the debated and undebated issues. Theoretically, learning should occur only of the debated issues, not of the undebated issues. If there was knowledge gain in the latter, we should suspect the presence of some confounding influences. Our content analysis of the debate transcript shows that 21 out of the 72 items were explicitly debated: 8 were addressed by Bush, 9 by Clinton, and 4 by Perot. Although these items accounted for less than one third of the original list, there are sufficient numbers to form a composite knowledge score for each candidate. Specifically, based on actual statements made by the candidates in the debate, we gave each correct answer a score of "1," and summed them for each candidate respectively (the wording and the key for these knowledge items are in Appendix B). Because the total number of issue items varies from one candidate to another, we converted the scores into percentages, to make the knowledge score about each candidate's positions comparable. Image perception. The research literature reports a wide variety of measures of presidential candidate images. We chose to follow a five-dimensional scheme developed by Miller and his associates (Miller, Wattenberg, and Malanchuk, 1984; Rusk and Weisberg, 1972). Our choice of this scheme was based on several considerations. First, its external validity has been tested by replications within many national probability samples. Second, its measures are derived from responses to open-ended questions. In other words, the assessment items are actually used by ordinary voters, rather than imposed by researchers (see Clarke and Kline, 1974, for a criticism of researcher-oriented measures). Third, the resulting cognitive structure of candidate assessments has been verified by eight National Election Studies over 32 years (1952-80). To quote Miller et al. (p. 208), "The empirical evidence ... provides consistent support for the theory that Americans evaluate presidential candidates on the basis of a limited set of general and enduring criteria. In short, people have a prototype of what a president should be like and they judge real candidates by these standards." Miller et al. labeled the five dimensions as "competence," "integrity," "reliability," "charisma," and "personal." Competence refers to a candidate's past political experience, comprehension of political issues, and intelligence. Integrity includes remarks such as trustworthy, honest, and sincere. Reliability is a label that does not well represent the traits involved, such as strong, decisive, and aggressive. The authors distinguished reliability from integrity in this way (p. 197): "Reliability thus serves as a bridge between integrity and competence. Perhaps the best definition of it [i.e., reliability] would be as trust in [a] capability sense rather than in the honesty sense." We have adopted the term "potency" to replace "reliability" in this study. Charisma (called "leadership" in an earlier version, Miller and MacKuen, 1979) deals with a candidate's ability to get along with and communicate with people. Personal is a catch-all category that includes various observable features of a candidate's appearance, such as age, health, smile, and speech pattern. In our study, we decided to call the last dimension "communication style." Miller et al. (1984) report that although all of these dimensions involved in the way voters judge presidential candidates, competence accounts for the most variance, followed by integrity. Charisma seems to be the least important among the five dimensions. In both pre- and post-test, we asked the subjects to rate each of the three candidates along 34 bipolar items, representing various specific personality traits. The evaluations were scored on 7-point scales with 7 being most positive and 1 most negative. The resulting scores were used to fit a five-dimension model. Since the model will repeat 6 times (=3 candidates x 2 points), not all of the 34 items fit all 6 models. Some items were salient only in the pre- or post-test. Others items were salient only for a particular candidate. Still other items loaded on almost all five dimensions across all candidates and all time points. Therefore, we selected 3 "best" items for each of the dimensions, or a total 15 items for each candidate at each point (see Appendix C for the wording of these items). This resulted in a quite satisfactory structure, in which each of the five image dimensions for each candidate at each point is made up by the same items, with a high internal consistency score ( Cronbach's alpha) around .80 (Appendix C). Analysis Our research question is fairly straightforward: whether the debate has a greater impact on image perception than issue knowledge, or vice versa. This question can be answered by simply comparing the coefficients of the independent variable (i.e., exposure to the debate) regressed on the two dependent variables (knowledge scores and image scores). The coefficients can be obtained from either an ANOVA approach which uses the change score of knowledge and image from pre-test to post-test as the dependent variable, or a regression approach which uses the post-test score as the dependent variable and the pre-test score as an covariate. We chose to follow the regression strategy because change score has limiting statistical properties (Heilzer, 1959; Rogosa, Brandt and Zimowski, 1982). On the other hand, regression analysis with pre-test score as a covariate can precisely measure the impact of pre-test on post- test (i.e., autocorrelation), which is often the best explanation for the lack of debate effects. For each candidate, 7 regression analyses were performed, each with one of the following post-test scores as the dependent variables: (1) knowledge of a candidate's position on the issues discussed by the candidate in the debate; (2) knowledge of the candidate's position on the issues he did not discuss in the debate; (3) perception of the candidate's competence, (4) potency, (5) integrity, (6) charisma, and (7) communication style. Exposure to the debate was the independent variable in every regression analysis. Only one pre-test score (e.g., Perception of Bush's Competence at Time 1) was entered in the corresponding regression (using Perception of Bush's Competence at Time 2 as the dependent variable). Gender, Employment, Party Affiliation, and Political Interest were included as control variables in every regression equation. The same seven regressions were repeated for three candidates, and for both experimental sample and natural viewer sample. In total, 42 (=7 x 3 x 2) regressions were conducted. For simplicity, we will report in Table 3 only the two central coefficients for each regression: exposure and the autoregressor (i.e., pre-test score). The coefficients of all other control variables and the overall model statistics are reported in Appendix D. FINDINGS -------------------- Table 3 about here ------------------- Learning Debated Issues The evidence is unambiguously strong for the effect of watching the debate on learning the issue positions discussed by the candidates in the debate. As the top panel ("Debated Issues") in Table 3 shows, after controlling for gender, employment, political interest, and party affiliation (not shown here), those watching the debate under the experimental condition know, on the average, 34% more about Bush's issue position, 24% more about Clinton's, and 39% more about Perot's position, as compared with the nonviewers. The learning is quite impressive, if one considers their knowledge level prior to the debate. Recall from Table 2 that, before the debate, the experimental viewers correctly answered 22% of Bush's positions, 39% of Clinton's, and 11% of Perot's, all of which were not different from the nonviewers' prior knowledge level. The same learning effects are detected among the natural viewers. An explanation is in order to help interpret the coefficients of exposure for both the experimental and natural samples. In the experimental sample, exposure is simply a dummy variable, coded 1 for the viewers and 0 for the nonviewers. The coefficient, therefore, indicates the average difference in learning between the viewers and the nonviewers, other things being equal. In the natural sample, as described before, exposure is an interval scale comprised from the number of 15- minute segments of the debate watched and the level of attention paid to the debate. To make the coefficients of exposure compatible between the two samples, we scaled the natural viewers' exposure to the range from 0 to 1, with 0 being minimal watching plus least attention, and 1 being maximum watching plus most attention. Therefore, the coefficient of 38.572 in column 4 of first line indicates that the most attentive viewers learned 39% more about Bush's issue positions than the least attentive viewers under the natural viewing condition, other things being equal. Qualitatively, the difference between the most attentive viewers and the least attentive viewers in the natural sample is not exactly the same as the difference between the experimental viewers and the nonviewers. However, as the top panel ("Debated Issues") of Table 3 shows, the differences appear to be comparable at least quantitatively. The corroboration between the experimental data and the survey data seems to rule out an artifactal effect from the experimental stimulus. It is interesting to note that while prior knowledge strongly affects the learning of Bush's or Clinton's issue position, the autocorrelation is nonsignificant for Perot who was little known before going into the debate. The absence of autocorrelation explains why exposure to the debate has the strongest effect on learning Perot's issue stance, among both experimental and natural viewers. Conversely, exposure has the relatively weakest impact on both experimental and natural viewers' learning of Clinton's position. The statement that the audience learned most about Perot's issue position but least about Clinton's position from the debate may obscure an important fact, however. The reason the viewers acquired the least issue knowledge about Clinton is simply that they had been most familiar with his positions prior to the debate (see Table 2). When considering both the baseline knowledge and the acquired knowledge, we can see an interesting pattern of convergence (Figure 1). For the viewers, despite quite different starting values, the debate "equalizes" the level of knowledge about all three candidates' issue positions. This pattern does not hold for the nonviewers who, as should be the case, knew more about Clinton's issue position than about the other two candidates both before and after the debate. -------------------- Figure 1 about here -------------------- Learning Undebated Issues While the viewers, either under an experimental condition or a natural setting, learned a great deal of the candidates' positions on the issues debated, they ought to have learned little about the undebated issues. As the second panel ("Undebated Issues") of Table 3 shows, neither the experimental viewers nor the natural viewers significantly improved their knowledge of any of the candidates' positions on any issue not discussed in the debate. This finding offers an additional validity check for the effect of the debate on learning the debated issues described above. In other words, the impact of debate on issue learning is only content-specific. Television does not have the magic power to generalize the knowledge gain beyond what is said in the debate. Image Perception The effect of watching the debate on the students' perception of candidates' character is much more limited. As the last five panels of Table 3 show, the impact of watching the debate is largely confined to the perception of Perot's character among the experimental viewers. An exception is that the experimental viewers also have a more positive view of Bush's communication style than the nonviewers, other things being equal. No difference can be found in Bush's other four image dimensions. Nor is there any difference in any of Clinton's five image dimensions. For the natural viewer sample, exposure to the debate virtually does not have any impact on any image dimension for any candidate. Nevertheless, the effect of watching the debate on Perot's image is substantial among the experimental sample. Other things being equal, the experimental viewers scored him about one to one and half points (on a 7-point scale) higher than the nonviewers for his integrity, charisma, and communication. However, there is no difference in perceptions of Perot's competence and potency, the two dimensions which may be more affected by a candidate's performance over a total career than his performance in a 90-minute debate (Miller et al., 1984). Why did the debate fail to bring about any significant change to Bush's or Clinton's images? The answer can be found in the stability of image perception, as indicated by the high autocorrelation coefficients between pre- and post-test image scores which range from about .50 to .80 for Bush and Clinton, respectively. The strong high autocorrelation shows that the subjects had already formed fairly firm perceptions of the two well-known politicians, after having been exposed to the nearly year-long campaign. Consequently, there should be minimal room for change. CONCLUSIONS AND DISCUSSION Summary of Previous Research A central concern of previous researchers of effects of presidential debates on the electorate has been whether the debates contribute to learning about issues in the campaign and whether they increase the salience of candidates' personality in voter decision making. The literature review reported here has found that a variety of research designs, concepts and measures have been used to study the effects of presidential debates. The review also has found that image formation has received attention in more studies than has issue learning, but that the trend is toward more study of issue learning. Few studies have focused on both issues and images. Generally, the methods used in study of issues appear to be somewhat stronger than those used to study images. Reviewing the variety of methods used, we have found that surveys have outnumbered experimental designs and that when experiments were used, they seldom have employed random assignment. Surveys have rarely employed national probability samples. Sample sizes tend to be small in both surveys and experiments. And most studies have used samples of students in both surveys and experiments. Most studies used a before-after design without a control group (i.e., "within-subjects design). A few studies even did not measure actual exposure to the debate studied. Results of these studies reflect the great variety of methods and approaches used. Nevertheless, most studies have found at least some effects of debate on issue learning, and more mixed effects on image formation. Results In This Study This study has found that the audience learned a great deal about the candidates' issue positions from the first presidential debate in 1992 election. The issue learning took place for all three candidates, with differential rates. The audience learned the most about the least known candidate, Perot, but learned the least about the most known candidate, Clinton. In the end, the debate equalized the level of issue knowledge across the three candidates. In addition, the issue learning occurred only to those issues discussed by the candidates in the debate. In other words, only message-specific effects have been found in this study. These patterns hold up in both the experimental and natural viewing conditions, and are consistent with expectations based on results of previous research. The results pertaining to the effects of the first televised presidential debate on image formation were mixed, which also is consistent with previous studies. The audience's perceptions of the two well-known candidates, the Incumbent president Bush, and the Democrat Party candidate Clinton who had run an effective campaign for almost a year, were not affected by the debate. Exposure to the debate, however, did substantially change the viewers' minds about the least known and least popular candidate, Ross Perot, in the positive direction. Perot had entered the race late (July 1992), had campaigned, withdrawn from the race, and recentered just before the first debate. As late as in early October, 1992, public opinion polls showed that a sizable portion of the electorate still were unsure, or negative about him.8 With these conditions providing the context, his performance in the debate could have been critical and our study results showed that the debate helped him improve his image considerably. However, of the five image dimensions we measured, the debate was more likely to affect the perception of three debate-related performance dimensions (i.e., integrity, charisma, and communication style), and two other dimensions which perhaps are better indicators of performance in office -- competence and potency. At least two important generalizations might be drawn from these results: First, debates are least effective in changing the public's mind about the character of a presidential candidate if he is well known; they are most effective when candidates are not well known. This generalization is consistent with findings reported in Table 1 that show greater impact in primary debates (in which several candidates, at least some of whom are not well known, compete for public attention) than in general election debates (in which a smaller number of well-known candidates participate). Second, when a candidate's image is changed by performance in a debate, the change occurs in dimensions of personality that are more evident in a debate format, and not in dimensions that are more relevant to performance in office. This generalization, if it holds up in future studies, could ease the concern of those who believe that a debate has potential to introduce irrational or non-rational considerations into a presidential campaign by shifting focus from issue considerations to personality considerations. It suggests that the public does not leap to conclusions about capabilities as president from proficiency as debater. Note that these findings are based on a fairly rigorous research design. Contaminated learning from external sources has been controlled by contrasting the change scores between the viewers and the nonviewers. Experimental artifacts have been offset by replicating the same measures in an experimental sample and a natural viewer sample. Knowledge learning has been verified with content analysis of actual debate transcript. Measures of image perceptions were developed based on a well- established literature, and have proven to have high reliability in this study. Given these characteristics, we believe the findings reported above are substantial and reliable. Based on our findings, we would like to draw several general comments on the implications of televised debates for the democratic process. First, debates appear to make positive contributions to rational vote decision-making by helping the audience learn substantial amounts about the candidates' issue stands. Note that the 1992 first presidential debate took place less than four weeks before the election. However, as shown by Lewis and Morgan (1992) and this study, the electorate had, on the average, only a 20% rate of accuracy about candidates' issue positions at that point in the campaign. Our study suggests that the first debate improved the accuracy rate over 50%. On the other hand, there seems to be less convincing evidence suggesting the fear that televised debates may have a negative impact on the democratic process by focusing the audience's attention on the candidates' personalities and character. As found in this study, debates do not have much impact on the audience's perception of well-known candidates. This should ease much of the concern about the negative impact of debates, because the presidential candidates are usually well-known by the time a debate takes place. As this study shows, when a less well-known candidate, usually an independent candidate, surges in the campaign, debates can enhance the candidate's images. Where this debate did influence the electorate's perception of a less well-known candidate, it was on traits that are relatively more related to debate performance, such as charisma and communication style, than on relatively job-related performance traits, such as competence and potency. However, as Miller et al. (1984) found, when it comes to the vote decision, the job-related performance dimension (i.e., competence) carries more weight than the debate-related dimensions. A final caution about the limits of our study is in order here. We used a student sample, and measured only short-term effects (i.e., right after exposure to the debate). While our design improves various shortcomings in the previous studies, it is still not clear whether our findings hold up in the general electorate and in the long-term (e.g., a week or more after the debate). ENDNOTES __________________________________________ 1 A study by Hagner and Rieselbach (1980) measured exposure, but did not use it to test the impact of debate for some unknown reason. Instead, they inferred the debate effects by comparing change scores between September and November. 2 Bothwell and Brigham (1983) had a group of nonviewers in their sample, but excluded it from the analysis of debate effects. We have considered this as a study without a control group. 3 Another 23 participating in the pre-test but did not come back for the post-test. They are excluded from this study. 4 Conducted by the Los Angeles Times from October 2 to 5, 1992, achieved at the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research of the University of Connecticut). In the survey, 49% reported "very interested," 43% "somewhat interested," and 7% "very/somewhat uninterested" in following the election campaigns. 5 For example, Gallup found 79% of those surveyed between October 1 and 3, 1992 were registered voters. The findings are achieved at the Roper Center. 6 See a survey conducted by Hartford Courant and Institute for Social Inquiry of University of Connecticut between August 27 and September 2, 1992, which is achieved at the Roper Center. 7 In fact, only one subject listened to the debate on radio, while the other 64 watched it on TV. For convenience, we will not distinguish the listener from the rest. 8 For example, CBS News/New York Times poll between October 2 and 4, 1992 found that while 7% of the registered voters were favorable about Ross Porot, 59% were not favorable. Another 36% were either not sure or did not hear enough about Ross Perot. The poll results are achieved at the Roper Center of the University of Connecticut. References Choi, Hayeon C., and Samuel L. Becker (1987). Media Use, Issue/Image Discriminations, and Voting. Communication Research, 14, 267-291. Clarke, Peter, and F. Gerald Kline (1974). Media Effects Reconsidered: Some New Strategies for Communication Research. Communication Research, 1, 224-240. Heilizer, Fred (1959). Some Cautions Concerning the Use of Change Scores. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 15, 447- 449. Joslyn, Richard A. (1984). Mass Media and Elections. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. Lewis, Justin, and Michael Morgan (1992). Images/Issues/Impact: The media and campaign '92. Unpublished report. Elmhurst, MA: The Center for the Study of Communication, University of Massachusetts. Lanoue, David J., and Peter R. Schrott (1991). The Joint Press Conference: The History, Impact, and Prospects of American Presidential Debates. New York: Greenwood Press. Lubell, Samuel (1962). Personalities vs. Issues. In Sidney Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Background - Perspective -- Effects. Indiana University Press, 151-162. Miller, Arthur H., Martin P. Wattenberg, and Oksana Malanchuk (1984). Cognitive Representations of Candidate Assessments. In Keith R. Sanders, Landa L. Kaid, and Dan Nimmo (Eds.), Political Communication Yearbook, 1984. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press. 183- 210. Miller, Arthur H., and Michael MacKuen (1979). Learning about the Candidates: The 1976 Presidential Debates. Public Opinion Quarterly, 43, 326-346. Rogosa, David, David Brandt and Michelle Zimowski (1982). A Growth Curve Approach to Measurement of Change. Psychological Bulletin, 92, 726-748. Rusk, J.G., and H.F. Weisberg (1972). Perceptions of Presidential Candidates: Implications for Electoral Change. Midwest Journal of Political Science, 16, 388-410. Several, Werner J., and James W. Tankard, Jr. (1992). Communication Theories: Origins, Methods, And Uses in The Mass Media, 3rd Ed. New York: Longman. TABLE 1 STUDIES OF DEBATE EFFECTS ON ISSUE LEARNING AND IMAGE FORMATION Total Issue Image Studies Knowledge Perception (N=35) (N=8) (N=23) Year of the Study 1960 5 1 5 1976 19 4 12 1980-88 11 3 6 Data Collection Survey26 4 20 Experiment 6 2 1 Exprmnt. & Survey 3 2 2 Study Design Before-After 30 5 20 After-Only 5 3 3 Exposure to Debate Measured 25 8 14 Unmeasured 10 0 9 Including Nonviewers Yes 10 4 5 No 25 4 18 Sample Characteristics National Adults4 0 3 Local Adults 16 6 11 Selected Groups2 0 2 Students 13 2 7 Sample Size Under 100 7 0 5 100-300 15 4 8 300+ 13 4 10 Campaign Context Primary Season 4 1 1 General Season31 7 22 Debate Sequence First Debate 28 7 20 Later Debate 7 1 3 Linking Debate Content Yes 5 2 0 No 30 6 0 Effects of Debate Substantial/Clear na 3 5 Moderate/Mixedna 4 10 None na 1 8 Note: Four studies which examined the impact of debate on affective response or vote decision are included in the overall 35 studies, but excluded from the issue- knowledge group and the image-formation group. TABLE 2 CHARACTERISTICS OF THREE GROUPS BEFORE THE DEBATE Exprmnt Non- Natural Viewers Viewers Viewers (N=53) (N=21) (N=65) Female 54.7% 71.4% 50.8% Employed 50.9 42.9 33.8 Class Standing Freshman 39.6 42.9 32.3 Jr. & Sr. 41.5 28.6 30.8 Media Reliance TV > Newspapers 43.4 28.6 35.4 TV < Newspapers 15.1 28.6 16.9 Election Particptn Registered to Vote 73.6 81.0 80.0 Intend to Vote 81.1 81.0 86.2 Political Interest* Very Much 30.2 23.8 40.6 Not At All 24.5 28.6 4.7 Party Affiliation Democrat 26.4 19.0 23.4 Republican 17.0 23.8 29.7 Independenta 56.6 57.1 46.9 TV = Newspapers 39.6 33.3 44.6 Pre-test Scores on Bush Debated Issues 22.10 21.76 25.27 Undebated Issues 25.10 21.61 30.41 Competence 4.88 4.96 5.37 Potency 5.11 4.95 5.38 Integrity 3.76 4.01 4.18 Charisma 4.53 4.90 4.94 Communication 4.12 4.03 4.35 Vote Choice .16 .14 .32 Pre-test Scores on Clinton Debated Issues 39.38 41.07 42.69 Undebated Issues 29.08 26.98 31.92 Competence 5.22 4.96 5.14 Potency 5.23 5.31 5.27 Integrity 4.21 4.52 4.35 Charisma 5.66 5.92 5.93 Communication 5.03 5.06 4.95 Vote Choice .50 .61 .41 Pre-test Scores on Perot Debated Issues 10.69 12.69 14.87 Undebated Issues 21.69 9.52 26.92 Competence 3.74 3.71 4.17 Potency 4.14 3.71 4.54 Integrity 3.31 2.84 3.66 Charisma 3.93 3.71 3.90 Communication* 3.15 2.98 3.81 Vote Choice .01 .00 .00 * Difference between the natural viewers and the experimental viewers/nonviewers is significant at .05. a "Independent" includes A Connecticut Party and People for Perot. TABLE 3 UNSTANDARDIZED OLS REGRESSION COEFFICIENTS (Standard Errors in Parentheses) Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Debated Issues Exposure 33.996*** 24.703*** 38.900*** 38.572*** 16.522** 38.894** to Debate (4.697) (4.090) (6.288) (7.188) (5.947) (11.904) Pretest .389** .562*** .248 .391*** .526*** .026 Score (.144) (.096) (.151) (.106) (.082) (.168) Undebated issues Exposure 1.937 2.672 8.677 -4.337 .558 16.147 to Debate (2.782) (2.722) (6.661) (5.812) (5.819) (12.019) Pretest .604*** .520*** .352** .719*** .642*** .474*** Score (.087) (.109) (.113) (.098) (.103) (.130) Competence Exposure.169 -.045 .400 .399 .381 .301 to Debate (.229) (.180) (.332) (.392) (.473) (.537) Pretest .796*** .544*** .679*** .493*** .584*** .466*** Score (.088) (.079) (.116) (.127) (.135) (.131) Potency Exposure.333 .076 .396 -.287 -.085 .328 to Debate (.265) (.230) (.333) (.371) (.382) (.598) Pretest .623*** .532*** .373*** .524*** .559*** .441*** Score (.091) (.092) (.090) (.098) (.092) (.108) Integrity Exposure.328 -.072 1.175*** .233 .766 .329 to Debate (.254) (.289) (.337) (.385) (.462) (.459) Pretest .828*** .772*** .542*** .681*** .573*** .768*** Score (.076) (.089) (.101) (.082) (.094) (.115) Charisma Exposure.218 .246 1.498*** .379 .240 .655 to Debate (.263) (.257) (.276) (.441) (.405) (.519) Pretest .838*** .573*** .553*** .696*** .493*** .295* Score (.092) (.110) (.082) (.096) (.112) (.123) Communication Exposure.561* .387 .843** -.092 .378 .430 to Debate (.265) (.263) (.304) (.439) (.461) (.584) Pretest .406*** .356*** .427*** .452*** .582*** .490*** Score (.087) (.103) (.110) (.106) (.113) (.116) Note: Exposure is a dummy variable for the experimental subjects with 1 being the viewer group and 0 being control group; for the natural subjects, it is an interval scale varying from 0 to 1 with 1 being maximum watching and attention and 0 being minimal watching and attention. APPENDIX A A LIST OF DEBATE EFFECTS STUDIES Barnett, G. A. (1981). A multidimensional analysis of the 1976 presidential campaign. Communication Quarterly, 29 (3), 156-165. Becker, L. B., Sobowale, I. A., Cobbey, R. E., and Eyal, C. H. (1980). Debates' effects on voters' understanding of candidates and issues. In G. F. Bishop, R. G. Meadow, and M. Jackson-Beeck (Eds.), The Presidential Debates: Media, Electoral, and Policy Perspectives. New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, pp. 126-139. Becker, L. B., Weaver, D. H., Graber, D. A., and McCombs, M. E. (1979). Influence of public agendas. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 418-428. Becker, S. L., Pepper, R., Wenner, L. A., and Kime, J. K. (1979). Information flow and the shaping of meanings. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 384- 397. Ben-Zeev, S. and White, I. (1962). In S. Kraus (ED.), The Great Debates: Background, Perspective, Effects. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 331-337. Bishop, G.F., R. W. Oldendick, & A. J. Tuchfarber (1980). The presidential debates as a device for increasing the "rationality" of electoral behavior. In G. F. Bishop, R. G. Meadow, and M. Jackson-Beeck (Eds.), The Presidential Debates: Media, Electoral, and Policy Perspectives. New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, pp. 179-196. Bothwell, R. K. and Brigham, J. C. (1983). Selective evaluation and recall during the 1980 Reagan-Carter debate. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 13 (5), 427-442. Bowes, J. E. and Strentz, H. (1979). Candidate images: stereotyping and the 1976 debates. In B. D. Ruben (Ed.), Communication Yearbook II, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, pp. 391-406. Carter, R. F. (1962). Some effects of the debates. In S. Kraus (ED.), The Great Debates: Background, Perspective, Effects. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 253-270. Davis, D. K. (1979). Influence on vote decisions. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 331-347. Davis, M. (1982). Voting intentions and the 1980 Carter-Reagan debate. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 12 (6), 481-492. Dennis, J., Chaffee, S. H., and Choe, S. Y. (1979). Impact on partisan, image, and issue voting. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 314-330. Drew, D., and Weaver, D.H. (1991). Voter learning in the 1988 presidential election: Did the debates and the media matter? Journalism Quarterly, 68, 27-37. Hagner, P. R. and Rieselbach, L. N. (1980). The impact of the 1976 presidential debates: conversion or reinforcement. In G. F. Bishop, R. G. Meadow, and M. Jackson-Beeck (Eds.), The Presidential Debates: Media, Electoral, and Policy Perspectives. New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, pp. 157-178. Hawkins, R. P., Pingree, S., Smith, K. A., and Bechtolt, W. E., Jr. (1979). Adolescents' responses to issues and images. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 368-383. Jones, B. V. (1982). Attitude change toward the candidates and of the 1980 presidential election. The Journal of Social Psychology, 116, 297-298. Kraus, S. and Smith, R. G. (1962). Issues and Images. In S. Kraus (ED.), The Great Debates: Background, Perspective, Effects. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 289-312. Lang, K. and Lang, G. E. (1962). Reactions of viewers. In S. Kraus (ED.), The Great Debates: Background, Perspective, Effects. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 313-330. Lang, G. E. and Lang, K. (1979). Immediate and mediated responses. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 298-313. Lang, G. E. and Lang, K. (1980). The formation of public opinion: Direct and mediated effects of the first debate. In G. F. Bishop, R. G. Meadow, and M. Jackson-Beeck (Eds.), The Presidential Debates: Media, Electoral, and Policy Perspectives. New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, pp. 61-80. Lanoue, D. J. and Schrott, P. R. (1989a). Voters' reactions to televised presidential debates: measurement of the source and magnitude of opinion change. Political Psychology, 10 (2), 275-285. Lanoue, D. J. and Schrott, P. R. (1989b). The effects of primary season debates on public opinion. Political Behavior, 11 (3), 289-306. Lemert, J. B., Elliot, W. R., Nestvold, K. J., and Rarick, G. R. (1983). Effects of viewing a presidential primary debate: an experiment. Communication Research, 10 (2), 155-173. McIntosh, E. G. (1989). Clarification of issues during the presidential debates. Psychological Reports, 64, 1124. McLeod, J. M., Durall, J. A., Ziemke, D. A., and Bybee, C. R. (1979). Reactions of young and older voters: Expanding the context of effects. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 348-367. Miller, A. H. and MacKuen. (1979). Informing the electorate: A national study. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 269-297. Nimmo, D., Mansfield, M., and Curry, J. (1980). Persistence and change in candidate images. In G. F. Bishop, R. G. Meadow, and M. Jackson-Beeck (Eds.), The Presidential Debates: Media, Electoral, and Policy Perspectives. New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, pp. 140-156. Oshagan, H. (1988). Looking at voting as a decisional processes: What factors determine initial preference? Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, 71st, Portland, OR, July 2-5. Payne, J. G., Golden, J. L., Marlier, J., and Ratzan, S. C. (1989). Perceptions of the 1988 presidential and vice-presidential debates. American Behavioral Scientist, 32 (4), 425-435. Pfau, M. (1987). The influence of intraparty political debates on candidate preference. Communication Research, 14 (6), 687-697. Simons, H. W. and Leibowitz, K. (1979). Shifts in candidate images. In S. Kraus (Ed.), The Great Debates: Carter vs. Ford, 1976. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 398-404. Stamm, K. R. (1985). Effects of the Bush/Ferraro debate on candidate characterization. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, 68th, Memphis, TN, August 3-6. Steeper, F.T. (1980). Public response to Gerald Ford's statements on Eastern Europe in the second debate. In G. F. Bishop, R. G. Meadow, and M. Jackson- Beeck (Eds.), The Presidential Debates: Media, Electoral, and Policy Perspectives. New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, pp. 81-104. Tannenbaum, P. H., Greenberg, B. S., and Silverman, F. R. (1962). Candidate Images. In S. Kraus (ED.), The Great Debates: Background, Perspective, Effects. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, pp. 271-288. APPENDIX B WORDING OF ISSUE KNOWLEDGE ITEMS (Numbered as original, correct answer in parentheses) #3. Wants to lower taxes on the profits obtained from investment in new business ventures only. (Clinton: Yes.) #7. Would require employers of 50 or more people to provide employees unpaid leave from their jobs when there are family emergencies or to care for new born children. (Bush: No; Clinton: Yes.) #9. Backs a major government program to hire people to work on building and rebuilding roads, bridges and railbeds. (Clinton: Yes; Perot: Yes.) #10. Would avoid sending troops to stop the violence between Serbs, Muslims and Bosnians and wants the violence stopped through diplomatic means. (Bush: Yes; Clinton: Yes; Perot: Yes.) #11. Wants legislation to reduce the number of civil (not criminal) lawsuits. (Bush: Yes). #15. Wants to increase taxes on "wealthier" Americans. (Bush: No; Clinton: Yes.) #16. Supports full and active participation of Afro-Americans in American social and economic life. (Bush: Yes; Clinton: Yes; Perot: Yes.) #18. Has presented a plan that would eliminate the national debt completely in 5 years. (Clinton: No.) #19. Advocates a government program to retrain workers who have become unemployed. (Bush: Yes; Clinton: Yes.) #20. Would increase government spending to treat AIDS patients and to find a cure for AIDS. (Bush: No; Clinton: Yes.) #24. Would increase the tax on gasoline 10 cents a gallon each year for the next five years. (Bush: No; Perot: Yes.) APPENDIX C WORDING OF IMAGE PERCEPTION ITEMS (Numbered as original, Cronbach's Alpha in parentheses) Competence: #1. Intelligent ... Not intelligent #2. Competent ... Incompetent #4. He knows a lot ... He doesn't know much (The Cronbach's Alpha of the three items for Bush is .76 at time 1 and .83 at time 2; for Clinton is .75 at time 1 and .75 at time 2; for Perot is .76 at time 1 and .90 at time 2.) Potency: #21. Aggressive .. Passive #22. Strong ... Weak #24. Dominant ... Subservient (The Cronbach's Alpha of the three items for Bush is .80 at time 1 and .85 at time 2; for Clinton is .75 at time 1 and .77 at time 2; for Perot is .81 at time 1 and .85 at time 2.) Integrity: #14. Trustworthy ... Untrustworthy #15. Sincere ... Insincere #33. Honest ... Dishonest (The Cronbach's Alpha of the three items for Bush is .87 at time 1 and .87 at time 2; for Clinton is .79 at time 1 and .84 at time 2; for Perot is .81 at time 1 and .80 at time 2.) Charisma #16. Pleasant ... Unpleasant #17. Warm personality ... Cold personality #31. Friendly ... Unfriendly (The Cronbach's Alpha of the three items for Bush is .82 at time 1 and .89 at time 2; for Clinton is .80 at time 1 and .87 at time 2; for Perot is .80 at time 1 and .89 at time 2.) Communication Skills #9. Expressive ... Unexpressive #10. Clear ... Vague #12. Speaks in specifics ... Speaks in generalities (The Cronbach's Alpha of the three items for Bush is .70 at time 1 and .67 at time 2; for Clinton is .65 at time 1 and .72 at time 2; for Perot is .65 at time 1 and .71 at time 2.) APPENDIX D TABLE 1 DETERMINANTS OF KNOWLEDGE SCORE ON DEBATED ISSUES Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Exposure 33.996*** 24.703*** 38.900*** 38.572*** 16.522** 38.894** to Debate (4.697) (4.090) (6.288) (7.188) (5.947) (11.904) Pretest .389** .562*** .248 .391*** .526*** .026 Score (.144) (.096) (.151) (.106) (.082) (.168) Gender 1.073 10.831** -8.699 -10.991* -4.102 -6.201 (male=1) (4.513) (4.067) (6.084) (4.480) (3.746) (7.332) Employed 5.903 8.502* -6.027 8.684 8.133* -9.114 (=1) (4.574) (3.889) (5.921) (4.798) (3.967) (7.878) Political 3.900 1.608 6.067 11.405** 7.150* 6.064 Interest (3.062) (2.676) (3.936) (4.480) (3.441) (6.172) Republican -3.435 -6.554 -7.801 -12.531* 2.633 12.986 (=1) (6.130) (5.237) (7.951) (5.408) (4.480) (8.818) Democrat -1.045 -.015 10.321 -8.245 .951 2.493 (=1) (5.175) (4.461) (6.815) (5.308) (4.437) (8.725) Constant 1.349 -.334 15.079 -7.558 3.450 6.357 (8.646) (7.966) ( 11.171) (9.516) (7.855) (15.436) Adj. R2 .484 .544 .413 .594 .607 .243 Note: Exposure is a dummy variable for the experimental subjects with 1 being the viewer group and 0 being control group; for the natural subjects, it is an interval scale varying from 0 to 1 with 1 being maximum watching and attention and 0 being minimal watching and attention. TABLE 2 DETERMINANTS OF KNOWLEDGE SCORE ON UNDEBATED ISSUES Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Exposure 1.937 2.672 8.677 -4.337 .558 16.147 to Debate (2.782) (2.722) (6.661) (5.812) (5.819) (12.019) Pretest .604*** .520*** .352** .719*** .642*** .474*** Score (.087) (.109) (.113) (.098) (.103) (.130) Gender-2.220 1.729 -10.411 -6.637 -.685 7.088 (male=1) (2.737) (2.582) (6.359) (3.651) (3.644) (7.776) Employed 1.650 -1.212 11.956 -.170 -3.208 -4.678 (=1) (2.628) (2.574) (6.325) (3.863) (3.859) (8.004) Political 5.138** 5.114** 5.171 6.014 7.121* 5.154 Interest (1.845) (1.777) (4.080) (3.445) (3.241) (6.907) Republican 1.980 -2.078 -1.531 -1.246 -2.277 1.660 (=1) (3.494) (3.441) (8.425) (4.469) (4.360) (9.092) Democrat -.957 -1.579 .529 -5.126 .331 1.407 (=1) (3.036) (3.011) (7.412) (4.319) (4.292) (9.119) Constant -1.997 .263 5.794 .817 -4.251 8.393 (4.979) (5.255) (11.792) (7.829) (7.614) (15.909) Adj. R2 .564 .378 .247 .612 .508 .212 For an explanation of Exposure, see note a in Table 1. TABLE 3 DETERMINANTS OF IMAGE SCORE ON COMPETENCE Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Exposure.169 -.045 .400 .399 .381 .301 to Debate (.229) (.180) (.332) (.392) (.473) (.537) Pretest .796*** .544*** .679*** .493*** .584*** .466*** Score (.088) (.079) (.116) (.127) (.135) (.131) Gender .447* .313 -.093 .165 .056 -.018 (male=1) (.217) (.169) (.316) (.251) (.289) (.347) Employed.193 -.059 -.179 -.249 -.057 -.124 (=1) (.217) (.170) (.316) (.271) (.316) (.359) Political -.000 -.022 .555** -.061 -.154 -.134 Interest (.142) (.115) (.206) (.206) (.243) (.287) Republican .163 -.094 -.596 .768* -.184 .178 (=1) (.296) (.230) (.417) (.295) (.362) (.403) Democrat -.352 .312 -.497 -.354 .178 -.029 (=1) (.250) (.198) (.373) (.299) (.343) (.406) Constant 1.082 2.815 .853 2.633 2.612 3.108 (.632) (.479) (.724) (.805) (.823) (.852) Adj. R2 .564 .444 .416 .361 .256 .139 For an explanation of Exposure, see note a in Table 1. TABLE 4 DETERMINANTS OF IMAGE SCORE ON POTENCY Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Exposure.333 .076 .396 -.287 -.085 .328 to Debate (.265) (.230) (.333) (.371) (.382) (.598) Pretest .623*** .532*** .373*** .524*** .559*** .441*** Score (.091) (.092) (.090) (.098) (.092) (.108) Gender .480 .073 -.117 -.082 -.086 -.400 (male=1) (.249) (.214) (.310) (.235) (.235) (.376) Employed -.144 -.034 .447 .079 .654* -.195 (=1) (.249) (.216) (.313) (.244) (.249) (.394) Political -.034 -.081 .597** -.279 -.263 .099 Interest (.163) (.142) (.206) (.186) (.193) (.315) Republican .166 .101 .054 .746** -.165 .032 (=1) (.337) (.295) (.416) (.269) (.290) (.446) Democrat -.539 .406 -.002 -.096 .006 .215 (=1) (.288) (.253) (.361) (.271) (.276) (.444) Constant 1.711 2.583 1.482 3.098 2.839 2.817 (.666) (.616) (.651) (.681) (.681) (.852) Adj. R2 .426 .333 .291 .471 .443 .236 For an explanation of Exposure, see note a in Table 1. TABLE 5 DETERMINANTS OF IMAGE SCORE ON INTEGRITY Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Exposure.328 -.072 1.175*** .233 .766 .329 to Debate (.254) (.289) (.337) (.385) (.462) (.459) Pretest .828*** .772*** .542*** .681*** .573*** .768*** Score (.076) (.089) (.101) (.082) (.094) (.115) Gender -.252 .002 .138 -.329 .035 .208 (male=1) (.243) (.274) (.312) (.241) (.289) (.299) Employed -.211 .261 .108 .088 .245 -.248 (=1) (.241) (.272) (.313) (.259) (.310) (.316) Political .072 -.100 .322 -.678** -.444 .174 Interest (.157) (.183) (.205) (.205) (.241) (.239) Republican .341 .075 -.108 .274 -.190 -.360 (=1) (.334) (.361) (.417) (.297) (.363) (.345) Democrat -.163 .344 .033 -.450 .322 .522 (=1) (.279) (.323) (.370) (.300) (.351) (.364) Constant 1.228 1.376 1.115 3.237 2.589 1.023 (.503) (.562) (.631) (.557) (.689) (.799) Adj. R2 .668 .560 .391 .648 .480 .388 For an explanation of Exposure, see note a in Table 1. TABLE 6 DETERMINANTS OF IMAGE SCORE ON CHARISMA Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Exposure.218 .246 1.498*** .379 .240 .655 to Debate (.263) (.257) (.276) (.441) (.405) (.519) Pretest .838*** .573*** .553*** .696*** .493*** .295* Score (.092) (.110) (.082) (.096) (.112) (.123) Gender -.409 .070 .232 -.113 .048 .259 (male=1) (.245) (.238) (.257) (.282) (.254) (.326) Employed -.206 -.244 .016 -.048 .336 .053 (=1) (.249) (.242) (.261) (.290) (.273) (.350) Political -.098 -.051 .344 -.482* -.139 -.183 Interest (.162) (.161) (.173) (.226) (.219) (.274) Republican -.187 .125 .082 .461 -.701* .533 (=1) (.348) (.325) (.348) (.337) (.311) (.389) Democrat -.522 .360 .232 -.443 .214 .664 (=1) (.286) (.296) (.301) (.336) (.302) (.410) Constant 1.304 2.409 1.096 2.404 3.038 3.696 (.626) (.698) (.595) (.794) (.729) (.953) Adj. R2 .570 .313 .514 .622 .374 .053 For an explanation of Exposure, see note a in Table 1. TABLE 7 DETERMINANTS OF IMAGE SCORE ON COMMUNICATION SKILLS Experimental Sample (N=74) Natural Viewer Sample (N=65) Bush Clinton Perot Bush Clinton Perot Exposure.561* .387 .843** -.092 .378 .430 to Debate (.265) (.263) (.304) (.439) (.461) (.584) Pretest .406*** .356*** .427*** .452*** .582*** .490*** Score (.087) (.103) (.110) (.106) (.113) (.116) Gender .316 .441 -.659* -.004 .149 .234 (male=1) (.246) (.245) (.287) (.278) (.277) (.356) Employed.185 .026 .285 -.072 .410 .082 (=1) (.258) (.248) (.293) (.304) (.303) (.381) Political -.218 -.069 .245 -.029 .137 .211 Interest (.163) (.166) (.188) (.228) (.228) (.295) Republican .445 .423 -.003 .689* -.693* .006 (=1) (.332) (.330) (.382) (.336) (.333) (.427) Democrat.130 .869** -.416 -.660* -.674* -.281 (=1) (.292) (.289) (.331) (.329) (.336) (.428) Constant 2.730 2.880 2.118 2.779 1.935 2.039 (.616) (.640) (.617) (.770) (.769) ( (.826) Adj. R2 .281 .251 .342 .411 .362 .217 For an explanation of Exposure, see note a in Table 1. more candidates), and ======================================================================= 58 Return-Path: <@[log in to unmask]:[log in to unmask]> Received: from CMUVM (NJE origin SMTP@CMUVM) by CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 5336; Tue, 3 Aug 1993 22:35:45 -0400 Received: from lynx.dac.neu.edu by CMUVM.CSV.CMICH.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R1) with TCP; Tue, 03 Aug 93 22:35:43 EDT Received: by lynx.dac.neu.edu (5.65/DEC-Ultrix/4.3) id AA00462; Tue, 3 Aug 1993 22:34:36 -0400 From: [log in to unmask] (William Smith) Message-Id: <[log in to unmask]> Subject: ZHUJ DEBATES 93 RTVJ Abstract To: [log in to unmask] (Elliott Parker) Date: Tue, 3 Aug 1993 22:34:34 -0400 (EDT) X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL21] Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Length: 1263 HUJ DEBATES 93 RTVJ Images vs. Issues in Presidential Debates Does the Audience Learn More about Images than Issues from Televised Debates? Effects of the First 1992 Presidential Debate Jian-Hua Zhu, J. Ronald Milavsky and Rahul Biswas Dept. of Communication Sciences University of Connecticut Storrs, CT 06226 Paper Submitted to the Radio and Television Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication, April 1, 1993 ABSTRACT This paper reviews all previous studies of debate effects on issue learning and image formation, and reports the results of a new study of the effects of the first presidential debate in the 1992 election. The study used a between-subjects design with repeated measures. The study was replicated under both experimental and natural viewing conditions. Results show that the viewers learned a great deal about candidates' issue positions that were discussed in the debate, but no learning took place of issues that were not debated. The debate did not affect the viewers' perception of the two well-known candidates' personalities, but improved the perception of the less well- known candidate, Ross Perot, on several debate-related personality traits.
|