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A citizen is deeply committed to fiscal conservatism and believes in minimal government spending. For an upcoming election, they decide to vote for the candidate from the political party that has historically advocated for lower taxes and reduced spending, without researching the specific candidate's personal record or current proposals. Which of the following represents the most significant potential weakness of this voter's decision-making strategy?
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
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Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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A voter has a demanding job and very little free time to research the detailed policy positions of every candidate on an upcoming ballot. However, they know they generally agree with the platform of a specific environmental advocacy group. The voter decides to vote for all the candidates endorsed by this group. Which of the following best analyzes this voter's decision-making process?
Voter Decision-Making Strategy
The Efficacy of Voter Heuristics
A voter might use different mental cues or 'shortcuts' to decide who to vote for when they don't have time to research every candidate in detail. Match each voter's action to the specific type of information shortcut they are using.
Analysis of a Voter's Shortcut
A voter who relies solely on a candidate's political party to make a voting decision is acting irrationally and is unlikely to choose a candidate who represents their interests.
A citizen is deeply committed to fiscal conservatism and believes in minimal government spending. For an upcoming election, they decide to vote for the candidate from the political party that has historically advocated for lower taxes and reduced spending, without researching the specific candidate's personal record or current proposals. Which of the following represents the most significant potential weakness of this voter's decision-making strategy?
Campaign Strategy for a Low-Information Electorate
Evaluating Competing Information Shortcuts
Using a candidate's political party as a mental cue is a common way for voters to make decisions with limited information. In which of the following scenarios would this particular cue be the least reliable for predicting a candidate's future actions in office?
A voter might use different mental cues or 'shortcuts' to decide who to vote for when they don't have time to research every candidate in detail. Match each voter's action to the specific type of information shortcut they are using.