In a recent article, Michal Smetana, Marek Vranka, and Ondřej Rosendorf examine public support for arms control in the context of the third nuclear age, arguing that the complex and technocratic nature of arms control practices contributes to low levels of public awareness. Consequently, the general public tends to rely on simplified heuristic frames to form attitudes toward individual arms control treaties, and public opinion in this area proves elastic and susceptible to “elite cues” from experts and politicians who leverage these heuristics in their messaging to shape mass attitudes.