Research Links

Book

Groenendyk, Eric W. (2013). Competing Motives in the Partisan Mind: How Loyalty and Responsiveness Shape Party Identification and Democracy. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Robert E. Lane Book Award (Honorable Mention), APSA Political Psychology Section

Reviewed in Political Science Quarterly 129(3) and PsycCRITIQUES 59(26).

Articles

Groenendyk, Eric, Yanna Krupnikov, John Barry Ryan, and Elizabeth Connors. (2023). "Selecting Out of Politics: The Self-fulfilling Role of Conflict Expectations." Conditionally accepted at American Political Science Review.

Groenendyk, Eric, Erik Kimbrough and Mark Pickup. (2023). "How Norms Shape the Nature and Origins of Mass Belief Systems." American Journal of Political Science, 67(3): 623-638.

Groenendyk, Eric. (2022). "Motivated Reasoning in Politics" Handbook of Politics and Public Opinion, Thomas Rudoph (Ed.) Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing.

Groenendyk, Eric and Yanna Krupnikov. (2021). “What Motivates Reasoning?  A Theory of Goal-Dependent Political Evaluation.” American Journal of Political Science, 65(1): 180-196.

Groenendyk, Eric, Michael W. Sances, Kirill Zhirkov. (2020) "Intraparty Polarization in American Politics." Journal of Politics 82(4): 1616-1620.

Groenendyk, Eric W. (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(2): 368-384.

Groenendyk, Eric (2019). "The Conditional Implications of Partisan Loyalty" Social Research 86(3): 695-720.

Groenendyk, Eric. (2018)“Competing Motives in a Partisan Electorate: Political Responsiveness, Identity Defensiveness, and the Rise of Partisan Antipathy” Political Psychology 39(S1): 159-171.

Groenendyk, Eric. (2016) “The Anxious and Ambivalent Partisan: The Effect of Incidental Anxiety on Partisan Motivated Recall and Ambivalent.” Public Opinion Quarterly 80(2): 460-479. 

Groenendyk, Eric W. and Antoine J. Banks. (2014). “Emotional Rescue: How Emotions Help Partisans Overcome Collective Action Problems.” Political Psychology 35(3): 359-378.

Groenendyk, Eric W. (2012).“Justifying Party Identification: A Case of Identifying with the Lesser of Two Evils.” Political Behavior 34(3):453-475.

            Best Paper Award, APSA Political Psychology Section

Valentino, Nicholas A., Ted Brader, Eric W. Groenendyk, Krysha Gregorowicz, and Vincent Hutchings. (2011).“Election Night’s Alright For Fighting: The Role of Emotions in Political Participation.” Journal of Politics 73(1):156-170.

            Best Paper Award, APSA Political Psychology Section

Groenendyk, Eric W. (2011). "Current Emotion Research in Political Science:  How Emotions Help Democracy Overcome its Collective Action Problem." Emotion Review 3(4): 455-463.

Valentino, Nicholas A.,Krysha Gregorowicz, and Eric W. Groenendyk. (2009). “Efficacy, Emotions, andthe Habit of Participation.” Political Behavior 31(3): 307-330.

Groenendyk, Eric W. and Nicholas A. Valentino. (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(3): 295-319.


Links:

Codebook for Monkey Cage:  "Liz Cheney is Extremely Conservative.  That won't Win Over Conservatives." By Groenendyk, Eric, Erik Kimbrough, Yphtach Lelkes, and Mark Pickup