A Framing Analysis Research Project

I'm working on writing up a lengthy description of an alternative to Lakoff's political theory, mostly because I feel guilty about doing little more than trashing it without offering anything positive to the discussion. My approach is based on, well, actual research, and unlike Lakoff's, it won't be designed to prove the superiority of one political party over any other. If it works, it would be equally useful to anyone of any political bent. Part of what my approach requires is actual empirical research on the structure of people's representations of the concepts involved in political debates (e.g., abortion, social security, health care, etc.). Unfortunately, college undergrads who are taking introductory psychology, and the people who are willing to do a study for $8/hr may not accurately represent the voting public in general (plus, no one's going to give me a grant to do the research anyway, so I have to do it cheaply, which means the reward for participating will simply be the satisfaction you get for contributing to my project), so I'm thinking that the internet may be a great place to collect such data. It would mean spreading the word to areas of the internet inhabited by people on the political right, the political left, or somewhere inbetween or outside of that dimension. The task would be pretty simple. People would simply have to list attributes of a particular concept (e.g., abortion) so that I would have the material to stick that data into a model (I didn't create the model, it's existed for years), which would output "candidate inferences" that people might make with certain comparisons, analogies, metaphors, etc. That information would then be used to guide the way people talk about the issues. In other words, it's designed to do what framing analysis is supposed to do.

My problem is that, well, I'm terrible at this social networking thing, so I am not really sure it would work to do it through the blog, and by soliciting other blogs. My question to you, then, is if I set this up, would you be willing to participate, and if you have a blog, would you be willing to spread the word so that we can get a broad sample? Naturally, doing it through the blog, I'd make the data (excluding, of course, any information that would identify the participants) available to anyone who wants it.

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George Lakoff has published two new political books, Whose Freedom?: The Battle Over America's Most Important Idea, and Thinking Points: Communicating Our American Values and Vision, as follow ups to his Moral Politics and Don't Think of an Elephant. I haven't read either of the new books (my New…

i have bring some center-right readers to the survey, i could post it prominently for a while on the group blog....

I don't have many regular visitors but I'd be happy to spread the word for you.

Will you be talking about Goffman some more? I'm fuzzy about the distinction between frames and keys and perhaps registers.

Anyhow, I'd be happy to participate in your research.

I think you might be jumping to assumptions about Lakoff's work trying to "prove the superiority of one political party." You might want to read all of "Moral Politics" first before you spend time doing more "actual" research.

Great idea, Chris. I bet I could get Kevin Drum to bring you some voices from the left. You'd probably get several hundred participants from his site alone. And, if he posts it, some right-wingers would probably also link it.

Slgalt, I've read Moral Politics a few times, and if you will check your copy, I believe you'll find that in in chapters 20-23, Lakoff provides several "arguments" based on psychological "research" (those are scare quotes, meant to be really scary), particularly from developmental studies, showing that the liberal metaphor is the right one, and the conservative metaphor is harmful. If that's not an attempt to prove the supriority of one political party over another, I don't know what would be.

Fido, I'm not going to talk about Goffman very much. In fact, I'm going to try to get away from talking about frames altogether, at least until the very end, to avoid confusion. My approach centers around schemas (think "frames in the head") and comparison, utilizing structure mapping as a guiding theory. I'm going to spend a lot of time talking a how existing knowledge structures affect the inrerpretation of new information and reasoning, research on political analogies, and things like that. At the very end, I'll talk about ways to use this knowledge, and at that point I might get deeper into Goffman. I'll have to think about exactly how I want to talk about it, again to avoid confusion, since Lakoff's theory will dominate people's representations of frames.

I'm in. I don't know whether I have any bloggers who read me who'd be interested, but I've already put up a post on it, so we'll see.

Chris, I think this sounds like a great idea, and I would be willing to help in any way possible. I do think that Clark has a valid point, so you (we?) would need to give careful thought to sampling issues, since internet samples are far from representative.

i'd definitely participate, although I have no blog to offer.

Clark, with this sort of thing, selection bias is inevitable. I just read a paper, in fact, in which they showed selection bias in lab experiments based on the incentives offered, and since all undergrads are offered incentives for participation, there's no way to avoid them. My hope is that if we can spread it through different segments of the blogosphere, the sample will be as representative as possible.

I'll participate and I'd be glad to post notice at The Valve and on an email list or two.

By bill Benzon (not verified) on 24 Oct 2006 #permalink

Even if bias turns out to be a real obstacle, it seems to me that something like this, if it spread widely enough, could at least provide some insight into possibilities that should be explored in the future, which isn't insignificant.

It would seem to me that it would not be of great difficulty to set up a Facebook app that would test just such frames and attitudes over a broad selection of people, both politically motivated and otherwise.

By seeing their other connections as members of teaparty groups or fans of Kieth Olbermann etc or none of the above, as well as religious groups, or garden societies have a very sharp picture of where they are coming from. I don't know how much of that is visible but participation can also give voluntary consent that would not be adjusted just for your app.

Groups have already done this (often for selfish reasons such as the Libertarian Graph) so you would not even be an outlier of what happens normally.

P.S. Some political positions are dysfunctional and some to the point of pathology, and they are partly as a result of child rearing, and they are primarily a function of Far Right Politics. There is considerable research on this including brain scans.