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Candidates prep for first debate

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With early or absentee voting already under way in more than half the states, any first impressions created in the debates could well be last impressions.

What the candidates say is sure to matter immensely, but how they say it may count for even more.

“We remember visual impressions from debates more than we remember specific words,” says Alan Schroeder, a Northeastern University professor who’s written a history of presidential debates.

Whether the candidates smile or grimace, strike a confident or defensive pose, speak with a resonant or strained tone of voice, it all matters.

That may be particularly true for the all-important undecided voters and those still open to changing their minds.

Staunch Democrats and Republicans may well be firm in their choices, said Patti Wood, an Atlanta-based expert on body language, but if less partisan voters are “frightened in general about their lives, if they’re insecure, they’re going to pick the most charismatic person.”

Both candidates have challenges to overcome on that score, according to Wood.

Obama, 51, has been sounding “very tired and very strained” lately, she said, and Romney, 65, “has a problem with appearing superior and cold.”

Overall, she said, “Romney is looking a little bit younger than Obama right now,” in terms of energy if not wrinkles.

Both candidates are experienced and competent debaters.

But each, setting the judgment bar high for his opponent, is working overtime to puff up the skills of the other guy and play down his own debate credentials.

Romney recently described the president as “eloquent in describing his vision” during the 2008 debates.

But the GOP nominee added that Obama “can’t win by his words, because his record speaks so loudly in our ears.”

Obama campaign spokeswoman Jen Psaki stresses that Romney has been preparing for the debates with “more focus than any presidential candidate in modern history.” Sketching sky-high stakes, Psaki says the Republicans fully expect the debates to be “their turning point” in the campaign.

The president himself mocked the idea that Romney still can alter the campaign dynamic.

“Every few days he keeps on saying he’s going to reboot this campaign and they’re going to start explaining very specifically how this plan is going to work — and then they don’t,” he said last week while campaigning in Virginia.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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