Receptiveness to opposing views is made up of four separate components: Emotional Equanimity, Intellectual Curiosity, Respect Toward Opponents, and Tolerance of Taboo Issues. Click on each component below to learn about what each component means and your score relative to other people.
Receptiveness is negatively correlated with age. In other words, older people tend to be a little less receptive. This graph plots your level of receptiveness against the average level of receptiveness for your age category.
In most of our studies we do not find a relationship between receptiveness and political affiliation. In other words, Liberals are roughly as receptive as Conservatives. This makes our scale less “politically biased” than other related measures. However, people on the political extremes tend to be less receptive. The graph below plots your level of receptiveness against the average level of receptiveness for other people with your political ideology.
We have not found a relationship between receptiveness and education. In other words, highly educated people are not typically more or less receptive than their less educated counter-parts. More educated people often score higher on measures of cognitive processing, such as Need for Cognition, but they still prefer to think about the arguments for their own side rather than opposing arguments.