The effect of experts on attitude change in public-facing political science: Scientific communication on term limits in the United States

Public Underst Sci. 2024 Apr 24:9636625241246084. doi: 10.1177/09636625241246084. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

How can scientists best inform the public and change attitudes? Does the message or the messenger matter more? We test the effect of scientific expert messengers and messages in a preregistered, nationally representative survey experiment in the United States. Consistent with our hypotheses, scientists can move public attitudes in areas where knowledge is based on a non-ideological misperception to a greater extent than the same science-based message from another source. Although we focus on political science as a field and Congressional term limits in the United States as a topic area, our findings have broader implications for science communication with policymaking relevance given the persistence of misperceptions among the public across all natural and social science research fields.

Keywords: United States; interaction experts/publics; misperceptions; political science; science communication; survey experiment.