%0 Journal Article %T A Negativity Bias in Reframing Shapes Political Preferences Even in Partisan Contexts %A Alison Ledgerwood %A Amber E. Boydstun %A Jehan Sparks %J Social Psychological and Personality Science %@ 1948-5514 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1948550617733520 %X Humans evolved to attend to valence and group membership when learning about their environment. The political domain offers a unique opportunity to study the simultaneous influence of these two broad, domain-general features of human experience. We examined whether the pervasive tendency for negatively valenced frames to ¡°stick¡± in the mind applies to both intergroup and intragroup political contexts. In a preregistered experiment, we tested the effects of negative-to-positive (vs. positive-to-negative) reframing on people¡¯s candidate preferences, first in the absence of party cue information and then in two partisan contexts: an intergroup context (analogous to a U.S. general election between opposing political parties) and an intragroup context (analogous to a U.S. primary election between candidates of the same party). We observed a persistent negativity bias in reframing effects, even in the presence of party cues. The results pave the way for future research at the intersection of psychology and political science %K negativity bias %K in-group bias %K framing effects %K sequential framing %K party cues %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1948550617733520