Eric W. Groenendyk, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2009 | University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor, MI |
Area:
GeneralGoogle:
"Eric Groenendyk"Parents
Sign in to add mentorNicholas A. Valentino | grad student | 2009 | University of Michigan | |
(The motivated partisan: A dual motivations theory of partisan change and stability.) |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Groenendyk E, Sances MW, Zhirkov K. (2020) Intraparty Polarization in American Politics The Journal of Politics. 0-0 |
Groenendyk E. (2019) Of Two Minds, But One Heart: A Good “Gut” Feeling Moderates the Effect of Ambivalence on Attitude Formation and Turnout American Journal of Political Science. 63: 368-384 |
Groenendyk E. (2018) Competing Motives in a Polarized Electorate: Political Responsiveness, Identity Defensiveness, and the Rise of Partisan Antipathy Political Psychology. 39: 159-171 |
Groenendyk E. (2016) The Anxious and Ambivalent Partisan The Effect of Incidental Anxiety on Partisan Motivated Recall and Ambivalence Public Opinion Quarterly. 80: 460-479 |
Groenendyk EW, Banks AJ. (2014) Emotional rescue: How affect helps partisans overcome collective action problems Political Psychology. 35: 359-378 |
Groenendyk E. (2012) Justifying Party Identification: A Case of Identifying with the “Lesser of Two Evils” Political Behavior. 34: 453-475 |
Groenendyk E. (2011) Current Emotion Research in Political Science: How Emotions Help Democracy Overcome its Collective Action Problem Emotion Review. 3: 455-463 |
Valentino NA, Brader T, Groenendyk EW, et al. (2011) Election night's alright for fighting: The role of emotions in political participation Journal of Politics. 73: 156-170 |
Valentino NA, Gregorowicz K, Groenendyk EW. (2009) Efficacy, emotions and the habit of participation Political Behavior. 31: 307-330 |
Groenendyk EW, Valentino NA. (2002) Of dark clouds and silver linings: Effects of exposure to issue versus candidate advertising on persuasion, information retention, and issue salience Communication Research. 29: 295-319+361 |