Many citizens express an intention to vote but then fail to follow through on their motivation. It is well known that impulsiveness contributes to unsound behaviors with adverse individual consequences like smoking, overeating, and undersaving. I apply these findings and theory to political participation and argue that present bias is also likely to limit collective behaviors. Those who desire to act are challenged by impulsiveness in following through on their motivation. In a nationally-representative survey merged to administrative records, those with present bias are around 10 points less likely to vote. Importantly, those with present bias are less likely to vote even after expressing pre-election intention to do so. Along with a forma...
Survey respondents have been found to systematically overreport their participation in political ele...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...
Bendor, Diermeier, and Ting (2003) develop a behavioral alternative to rational choice models of tur...
Field experiments and regression discontinuity designs test whether voting is habit forming by exami...
ABSTRACT: Theories of voter turnout have focused almost exclusively on the costs and benefits of vot...
Electoral participation research points to political interest as a strong and consistent predictor o...
This article investigates the effect of social conformity on voting behavior. Past research shows th...
The fact that many citizens fail to vote is often cited to motivate others to vote. Psychological re...
Instrumental voting models predict that turnout depends on the chance of casting a pivotal vote, whi...
Many democratic citizens habitually abstain from the political process, and the reasons for this abs...
We construct a decision-theoretic model of turnout, in which individuals maximize their subjective e...
Survey respondents have been found to systematically overreport their participation in political ele...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Elite support for modifying electoral institutions and policies generally depends on whether a propo...
Survey respondents have been found to systematically overreport their participation in political ele...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...
Bendor, Diermeier, and Ting (2003) develop a behavioral alternative to rational choice models of tur...
Field experiments and regression discontinuity designs test whether voting is habit forming by exami...
ABSTRACT: Theories of voter turnout have focused almost exclusively on the costs and benefits of vot...
Electoral participation research points to political interest as a strong and consistent predictor o...
This article investigates the effect of social conformity on voting behavior. Past research shows th...
The fact that many citizens fail to vote is often cited to motivate others to vote. Psychological re...
Instrumental voting models predict that turnout depends on the chance of casting a pivotal vote, whi...
Many democratic citizens habitually abstain from the political process, and the reasons for this abs...
We construct a decision-theoretic model of turnout, in which individuals maximize their subjective e...
Survey respondents have been found to systematically overreport their participation in political ele...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Elite support for modifying electoral institutions and policies generally depends on whether a propo...
Survey respondents have been found to systematically overreport their participation in political ele...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...