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Department of Psychology, Room 400A, Downing Street, CB2 3EB
How do you take voting decisions? In the Political Psychology Laboratory, we investigate the psychology of politics. Join this brief exercise to participate in a study pilot, learn about the psychology of voting under different conditions, and better understand your own decision making!
The Cambridge Political Psychology Lab attempts to apply insights from psychology to understand real world political decision making. This ranges from computational social psychology approaches (such as the analysis of the distribution and impact of regional variability in psychological traits, as illustrated above in the maps from James Ackland's work), to experimental psychological studies of cognitive biases, to the impact of different voting systems on the psychology of political decision making. The lab is focused on the empirical study of individual voters (not politicians). The immediate goal of the research program is to put psychological theory and methods to the test in this complex real-world domain. The longer-term ambition is to help us to think about how the democratic progress can be improved through a better understanding of human psychology.