Are ordinary citizens better at predicting election results than conventional voter intention polls? We address this question by comparing eight forecasting models for British general elections: one based on voters’ expectations of who will win and seven based on who voters themselves intend to vote for (including “uniform national swing model” and “cube rule” models). The data come from ComRes and Gallup polls as well as the Essex Continuous Monitoring Surveys, 1950–2017, yielding 449 months with both expectation and intention polls. The large sample size allows us to compare the models’ prediction accuracy not just in the months prior to the election, but over the years leading up to it. In predicting both the winning party and parties...
In this paper we propose a novel method to forecast the result of elections using only official resu...
Who will be the next US President? Some commentators have argued that voter intention polls are flaw...
The assumptions behind various election forecasting models lead to different central predictions for...
Are ordinary citizens better at predicting election results than conventional voter intention polls?...
Who do you think will win in your constituency? Most citizens correctly answer this question, and gr...
This paper examines two rival forecasting models of election outcomes for Britain. The first is a mo...
This paper outlines and discusses techniques for three stages in forecasting parliamentary seats fro...
For decades political pollsters have relied on questions about people’s voting intention in order to...
This study tests non-representative expectation surveys as a method for forecasting elections. For d...
In averaging forecasts within and across four component methods (i.e., polls, prediction markets, ex...
Can citizens forecast the outcome of the UK election? In this post, Andreas Murr presents the result...
The dominant methodology for short-term forecasting of electoral outcomes uses trial-heat polls, whe...
Citizen forecasting is the subject that ties this thesis together. Citizens base their vote choice i...
In recent years, the British polling industry has encountered difficulties in its attempts to measur...
Political scientists interested in estimating how public opinion varies by constituency have develop...
In this paper we propose a novel method to forecast the result of elections using only official resu...
Who will be the next US President? Some commentators have argued that voter intention polls are flaw...
The assumptions behind various election forecasting models lead to different central predictions for...
Are ordinary citizens better at predicting election results than conventional voter intention polls?...
Who do you think will win in your constituency? Most citizens correctly answer this question, and gr...
This paper examines two rival forecasting models of election outcomes for Britain. The first is a mo...
This paper outlines and discusses techniques for three stages in forecasting parliamentary seats fro...
For decades political pollsters have relied on questions about people’s voting intention in order to...
This study tests non-representative expectation surveys as a method for forecasting elections. For d...
In averaging forecasts within and across four component methods (i.e., polls, prediction markets, ex...
Can citizens forecast the outcome of the UK election? In this post, Andreas Murr presents the result...
The dominant methodology for short-term forecasting of electoral outcomes uses trial-heat polls, whe...
Citizen forecasting is the subject that ties this thesis together. Citizens base their vote choice i...
In recent years, the British polling industry has encountered difficulties in its attempts to measur...
Political scientists interested in estimating how public opinion varies by constituency have develop...
In this paper we propose a novel method to forecast the result of elections using only official resu...
Who will be the next US President? Some commentators have argued that voter intention polls are flaw...
The assumptions behind various election forecasting models lead to different central predictions for...