We investigated the extent to which the human capacity for recognition helps to forecast political elections: We compared naive recognition-based election forecasts computed from convenience samples of citizens' recognition of party names to (i) standard polling forecasts computed from representative samples of citizens' voting intentions, and to (ii) simple---and typically very accurate---wisdom-of-crowds-forecasts computed from the same convenience samples of citizens' aggregated hunches about election results. Results from four major German elections show that mere recognition of party names forecast the parties' electoral success fairly well. Recognition-based forecasts were most competitive with the other models when forecasting the sm...
The emergent literature on citizen forecasting suggests that the public, in the aggregate, can often...
Four groups made forecasts of the outcome of the Swedish Parliamentary election in the fall of 2006....
Most citizens correctly forecast which party will win in most elections, usually with greater accura...
We investigated the extent to which the human capacity for recognition helps to forecast political e...
Mass election predictions are increasingly used by election forecasters and public opinion scholars....
The present research note contributes to the (citizen) forecasting literature by leveraging vote exp...
Who do you think will win in your constituency? Most citizens correctly answer this question, and gr...
Five days in advance of the 2005 German national election, political experts, voters, and novices we...
This study tests non-representative expectation surveys as a method for forecasting elections. For d...
Increasingly, professional forecasters rely on citizen forecasts when predicting election results. F...
"Five days in advance of the 2005 German national election, political experts, voters, and novices w...
For decades political pollsters have relied on questions about people’s voting intention in order to...
Most citizens correctly forecast which party will win a given election, and such forecasts usually h...
Increasingly, professional forecasters rely on citizen forecasts when predicting election results. F...
The expectations of voters regarding election outcomes appear to be mostly influenced by their own p...
The emergent literature on citizen forecasting suggests that the public, in the aggregate, can often...
Four groups made forecasts of the outcome of the Swedish Parliamentary election in the fall of 2006....
Most citizens correctly forecast which party will win in most elections, usually with greater accura...
We investigated the extent to which the human capacity for recognition helps to forecast political e...
Mass election predictions are increasingly used by election forecasters and public opinion scholars....
The present research note contributes to the (citizen) forecasting literature by leveraging vote exp...
Who do you think will win in your constituency? Most citizens correctly answer this question, and gr...
Five days in advance of the 2005 German national election, political experts, voters, and novices we...
This study tests non-representative expectation surveys as a method for forecasting elections. For d...
Increasingly, professional forecasters rely on citizen forecasts when predicting election results. F...
"Five days in advance of the 2005 German national election, political experts, voters, and novices w...
For decades political pollsters have relied on questions about people’s voting intention in order to...
Most citizens correctly forecast which party will win a given election, and such forecasts usually h...
Increasingly, professional forecasters rely on citizen forecasts when predicting election results. F...
The expectations of voters regarding election outcomes appear to be mostly influenced by their own p...
The emergent literature on citizen forecasting suggests that the public, in the aggregate, can often...
Four groups made forecasts of the outcome of the Swedish Parliamentary election in the fall of 2006....
Most citizens correctly forecast which party will win in most elections, usually with greater accura...