All Stories

  1. Attending Church Encourages Acceptance of Atheists? Suppression Effects in Religion and Politics Research
  2. A Look Back At 20 Years of Research on Gender and Voting in Politics & Gender
  3. Affective Language in the Most Important Issues of the 2019 and 2021 Canadian Elections
  4. Social Capital, Institutional Rules, and Constitutional Amendment Rates
  5. Objectified and Dehumanized: Does Objectification Impact Perceptions of Women Political Candidates?
  6. Introduction to the Special Issue—Life Science in Politics: Methodological Innovations and Political Issues
  7. Racial Limitations on the Gender, Risk, Religion, and Politics Model
  8. Political taste: Exploring how perception of bitter substances may reveal risk tolerance and political preferences
  9. Political attitudes vary with detection of androstenone
  10. Slimy worms or sticky kids
  11. The Higher Power of Religiosity Over Personality on Political Ideology
  12. American Constitutional Faith and the Politics of Hermeneutics
  13. Digital Segregation: Gender, Occupation, and Access to Politics
  14. Generational Change? The Effects of Family, Age, and Time on Moral Foundations
  15. Justify your alpha
  16. Moralizing to the Choir: The Moral Foundations of American Clergy*
  17. Physiological Arousal and Self-Reported Valence for Erotica Images Correlate with Sexual Policy Preferences
  18. Religion, Gender, Personality and Civic Involvement
  19. The Effect of Personal Economic Values on Economic Policy Preferences*
  20. Beyond Survey Self-Reports: Using Physiology to Tap Political Orientations
  21. Do Political Attitudes and Religiosity Share a Genetic Path?
  22. Religion, Politics, and the Social Capital of Children
  23. Mitigating Mormonism: Overcoming Religious Identity Challenges with Targeted Appeals
  24. The Politics of Denying Communion to Catholic Elected Officials
  25. Beyond the “Three Bs”: How American Christians Approach Faith and Politics
  26. The Physiology of Political Participation
  27. The political left rolls with the good and the political right confronts the bad: connecting physiology and cognition to preferences
  28. Gender and Physiological Effects in Connecting Disgust to Political Preferences