Preferences for pets or particular kinds of food can accurately predict partisanship, research from more than 200,000 TIME readers shows
In January, TIME ran a 12-question quiz that guessed your politics based on things like your preference for cats versus dogs and the neatness of your desk. The survey’s questions were all taken from previous research projects that found differences between liberals and conservatives on matters not directly related to politics.
Many readers were skeptical, to say the least. The comments section simmered with protests like “Since WHEN does being a cat-lover make one a liberal?” and “Having a neat desk isn’t political.”
Loving cats may not make a person a liberal, but it does increase the odds that a person already is one. To see how accurate our survey was, we analyzed the data from 220,192 TIME readers who took the quiz and then volunteered their actual political preferences, and found that all 12 items did in fact predict partisanship correctly.
Results
Each graph below represents the average response by ideology for one of the 12 questions. Charts are shaded red if agreement with the statement correlates with conservativism, blue if it correlates with liberalism.
Since Libertarians don't have a clear place on the liberal-conservative spectrum, they're graphed here by arrows and the letter 'L' and placed near the ideology that their responses most closely match for each question.
I prefer cats to dogs.
I prefer documentaries to action/adventure movies.
Respect for authority is something all children need to learn.
I keep my desk and other workspaces very neat and organized.
I believe that self-expression is more important than self-control.
I would try a new restaurant that blended the cuisines of two very different cultures.
My gov't should treat its citizens' lives as much more valuable than other nations'.
It's OK for one partner in a serious relationship to look at pornography alone
I wish there were no nations or borders and we were all part of one big group.
I would rather go to Times Square than the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
I am proud of my country’s history.
I use Internet Explorer
Even seemingly innocuous questions like ones about the state of one’s desk or preference for fusion cuisine had at least modest predictive power. A majority of TIME readers, like a majority of Americans, prefer dogs to cats, but conservatives had a significantly stronger preference, on average.
Overall, the quiz’s predictions were quite accurate when compared to a respondent’s self-reported ideology. (The correlation coefficient was 0.682, for those of you keeping score at home.) The individual questions varied in their predictive accuracy, from low (but non-negligible) correlation of 0.124 for the “cats versus dogs” question to 0.471 for the statement “I’m proud of my country’s history.”
When you add together a bunch of these modest predictors, you end up with a pretty good guess as to how a person votes. Not as good as asking people about their views on taxes, abortion and gun control, but enough to show that partisanship nowadays correlates with many non-political attitudes and behaviors.
Interestingly, Libertarians—often considered as being on the political right—fell between the liberal and conservative extremes on most questions. Even when it came to an affinity for nature’s truest libertarians: felines.
Read more: Liberals Like Cats, Conservatives Like Internet Explorer: Quiz Results | TIME.com http://science.time.com/2014/02/18/its-true-liberals-like-cats-more-than-conservatives-do/#ixzz2thdShz6B
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