Figures from postelection surveys often grossly overestimate election turnout. Two distinct phenomena are responsible for this gap: overrepresentation of actual voters and vote misreporting by actual nonvoters among survey respondents. Previous accounts of turnout bias are inconclusive in that they either focus on a single component, or fail to separate between the two. In this paper, we formally decompose turnout bias in election surveys into its constituent parts, assess their empirical prevalence and heterogeneity using an extensive collection of 49 vote validation studies from six countries, and employ Bayesian meta regression techniques to account for cross-study differences. Our results indicate that both election and survey character...
Research about the determinants of electoral participation mainly relies on survey respondents ’ sel...
Electoral participation research points to political interest as a strong and consistent predictor o...
Consumers of the National Election Study (NES) should be concerned if the survey has a bias that is ...
Figures from postelection surveys often grossly overestimate election turnout. Two distinct phenomen...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...
Since the early days of postelection surveying, the question of how accurate self-reported participa...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
Aggregate survey estimates of voter participation rates generally exceed actual voter turnout rates,...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
Assessing individual-level theories of electoral participation requires survey-based measures of tur...
Researchers studying electoral participation often rely on post-election surveys. However, the repor...
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...
Electoral participation research points to political interest as a strong and consistent predictor o...
Consumers of the National Election Study (NES) should be concerned if the survey has a bias that is ...
Figures from postelection surveys often grossly overestimate election turnout. Two distinct phenomen...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...
Since the early days of postelection surveying, the question of how accurate self-reported participa...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
Aggregate survey estimates of voter participation rates generally exceed actual voter turnout rates,...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
This article assesses whether—and to what extent—turnout bias in postelection surveys is reduced by ...
Assessing individual-level theories of electoral participation requires survey-based measures of tur...
Researchers studying electoral participation often rely on post-election surveys. However, the repor...
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...
Electoral participation research points to political interest as a strong and consistent predictor o...
Consumers of the National Election Study (NES) should be concerned if the survey has a bias that is ...