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2020 | 62 | 4 | 314 – 334

Article title

PERCEPTIONS OF THE POLICE: THE ROLE OF NEED FOR COGNITION AND NUMERACY

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The public’s perceptions of the police are related to people’s willingness to obey the law and cooperate with law enforcement. Past research has found that demographics affect perceptions of the police. This study hypothesizes that those with a higher level of need for cognition and numeracy have more positive attitudes toward the police, possibly because they are more likely to recognize the importance and neces¬sity of the police. 443 U.S. residents participated in this study via MTurk in May 2019. The demographic variables of age, gender, education, race, income, political ideology and party affiliation were collected. Crime rate was estimated via zip code obtained by searching IP address. Participants also completed the need for cognition, subjective and objective sales. As a result, in addition to replicating the role of demographic variables and crime rate, the study found that after controlling for demographics and crime rate, perceptions of the police were positively related to need for cognition and subjective and objective nu¬meracy. Overall, this study indicates that thinking disposition and cognitive ability play a significant role in how the public perceives the police. The study also implies that perceptions of the police were a class issue. Future studies on hot social issues could extend their focus to cognitive factors.

Keywords

EN

Year

Volume

62

Issue

4

Pages

314 – 334

Physical description

Contributors

  • Bartlett 2068, Department of Psychology, University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, Iowa, United States, 50614
author

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-72e5e67c-f802-49df-b821-6baaa8a6f718
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