Prior studies of strategic voting in multi-party elections potentially overestimate the extent of it by counting erroneously votes cast under different motivations as strategic votes. We propose a method that corrects some of this overestimation by distinguishingbetween strategic voting (voting for a candidate other than the most preferred one to reduce the likelihood of an election victory by a third candidate that is disliked even more) and the votes cast under the ‘bandwagon effect’ (voting for the expected winner instead of the most preferred party to conform to the majority or to be on the winning side). Our method follows from the observation that a vote cannot be strategic unless the voter believes that it will affect the outcome of ...
Simple plurality election systems (commonly known as “First-Past-The-Post”) are often associ-ated wi...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Economics, 2016.Cataloged from PD...
Despite decades of scholarly inquiry, the debate on the existence of a bandwagon effect in politics ...
Prior studies of strategic voting in multi-party elections potentially overestimate the extent of it...
Most previous empirical studies about strategic voting counted the bandwagon effect into the effect ...
This paper surveys the literature on psychological and strategic mental processes of band-wagon beha...
Whether citizens vote strategically, using their votes to defeat their least-preferred candidate, or...
We estimate a model of strategic voting and quantify the impact it has on election outcomes. Because...
Abstract: Many analyses of plurality-rule elections predict the complete coor-dination of strategic ...
Empirical studies of voting behavior provide evidence of bandwagon effects. Some voters, believing t...
In today’s elections, abundantly available polls inform voters what parties lead and what parties tr...
Many analyses of plurality-rule elections predict the complete coordination of strategic voting, and...
In a plurality-rule election, a group of voters must coordinate behind one of two challengers in ord...
This dissertation contributes to the study of social influence on public opinion and political behav...
Social scientists have long speculated about individuals' tendencies to misrepresent their preferenc...
Simple plurality election systems (commonly known as “First-Past-The-Post”) are often associ-ated wi...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Economics, 2016.Cataloged from PD...
Despite decades of scholarly inquiry, the debate on the existence of a bandwagon effect in politics ...
Prior studies of strategic voting in multi-party elections potentially overestimate the extent of it...
Most previous empirical studies about strategic voting counted the bandwagon effect into the effect ...
This paper surveys the literature on psychological and strategic mental processes of band-wagon beha...
Whether citizens vote strategically, using their votes to defeat their least-preferred candidate, or...
We estimate a model of strategic voting and quantify the impact it has on election outcomes. Because...
Abstract: Many analyses of plurality-rule elections predict the complete coor-dination of strategic ...
Empirical studies of voting behavior provide evidence of bandwagon effects. Some voters, believing t...
In today’s elections, abundantly available polls inform voters what parties lead and what parties tr...
Many analyses of plurality-rule elections predict the complete coordination of strategic voting, and...
In a plurality-rule election, a group of voters must coordinate behind one of two challengers in ord...
This dissertation contributes to the study of social influence on public opinion and political behav...
Social scientists have long speculated about individuals' tendencies to misrepresent their preferenc...
Simple plurality election systems (commonly known as “First-Past-The-Post”) are often associ-ated wi...
Thesis: S.M., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Economics, 2016.Cataloged from PD...
Despite decades of scholarly inquiry, the debate on the existence of a bandwagon effect in politics ...