Is there a more common term for that? I think it’s a huge problem in polling. I googled and I didn’t make much progress. I found this…

Expressive Responding in Support of Donald Trump: An Extended Replication of Schaffner and Luks (2018) | Collabra: Psychology | University of California Press

There is considerable debate about whether survey respondents regularly engage in “expressive responding” – professing to believe something that they do not sincerely believe to show support for their in-group or hostility to an out-group.

The problem is that “expressive responding” is a technical term. At Wikipedia I searched for “expressive responding” (in double quotes) and I got zero results.

Of course that mental mindset is big deal when it comes to Trump. A recent example - Lots of Republicans suddenly think the economy wasn’t that bad after all. There’s not exactly a “debate” when it comes to Trump and republican voters. They always do it when Trump is involved. It’s not a coincidence that the election always causes a rapid change in what they say they believe.

  • miz [any, any]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    I don’t know if there’s a term but it reminds me of that experiment where there’s one test subject and a whole bunch of actors who gaslight the subject by all agreeing on an obviously wrong answer