Researchers studying electoral participation often rely on post-election surveys. However, the reported turnout rate is usually much higher in survey samples than in reality. Survey methodology research has shown that offering abstainers the opportunity to use face-saving response options succeeds at reducing overreporting by a range of 4 to 8 percentage points. This finding rests on survey experiments conducted in the United States after national elections. We offer a test of the efficacy of the face-saving response items through a series of wording experiments embedded in 19 post-election surveys in Europe and Canada, at four different levels of government. With greater variation in contexts, our analyses reveal a distribution of effect s...
Research about the determinants of electoral participation mainly relies on survey respondents ’ sel...
Survey respondents have consistently been found to overreport their participation in political elect...
This paper outlines a new method for surveys to study elections and voter attitudes. Pre-election su...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Figures from postelection surveys often grossly overestimate election turnout. Two distinct phenomen...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
Since the early days of postelection surveying, the question of how accurate self-reported participa...
Assessing individual-level theories of electoral participation requires survey-based measures of tur...
Researchers are dependent on high quality information arising from post-election survey data in orde...
Though the overreporting of voter turnout in the National Election Study (NES) is widely known, this...
Consumers of the National Election Study (NES) should be concerned if the survey has a bias that is ...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...
Research about the determinants of electoral participation mainly relies on survey respondents ’ sel...
Survey respondents have consistently been found to overreport their participation in political elect...
This paper outlines a new method for surveys to study elections and voter attitudes. Pre-election su...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Figures from postelection surveys often grossly overestimate election turnout. Two distinct phenomen...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
Since the early days of postelection surveying, the question of how accurate self-reported participa...
Assessing individual-level theories of electoral participation requires survey-based measures of tur...
Researchers are dependent on high quality information arising from post-election survey data in orde...
Though the overreporting of voter turnout in the National Election Study (NES) is widely known, this...
Consumers of the National Election Study (NES) should be concerned if the survey has a bias that is ...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...
Research about the determinants of electoral participation mainly relies on survey respondents ’ sel...
Survey respondents have consistently been found to overreport their participation in political elect...
This paper outlines a new method for surveys to study elections and voter attitudes. Pre-election su...