Many questions in political science require knowing not only what voters want (pref-erence orientation) but also how much they want it (preference intensity). In this paper, we assess two methods for measuring individual differences in preference intensity. One method — issue importance items — asks respondents to self-report how important a given set of policy proposals is to them personally. Another — Quadratic Voting for Survey Research (QVSR) — gives respondents a fixed budget to ‘buy’ votes in favor of (against) these policy proposals, with the price for each vote increasing quadratically. We provide theoretical arguments explaining why, in a polarized environment where some respondents may feel pressured to pay lip service to the part...
"Likert scales" are the most standard and widespread instrument in survey research when measuring pu...
"One of the fundamental uses of surveys is the measurement of policy preferences. We can ask voters ...
If nothing else, democratic politics requires compromise. Mass polarization, where citizens disagree...
Many questions in political science require knowing not only what voters want (pref-erence orientati...
In this paper, we study the measurement of polarization in collective decision making problems with ...
In this paper, we study the measurement of polarization in collective decision making problems with ...
We adapt an axiomatically derived measure of polarization due to Esteban and Ray (1994) to measure p...
The present paper proposes and develops a way of conceptualizing and measuring preference polarizati...
We propose a method for decomposing variation in the issue preferences that US citizens express on s...
The effect of variation in citizens ' policy preferences on salient political outcomes lies at ...
We propose and analyze a general model of simple preference intensity comparisons. The model encompa...
Surveys and opinion polls are essential instruments to elicit societal preferences and uncover diffe...
One of the fundamental uses of surveys is the measurement of policy preferences. We can ask voters ...
We propose a method for decomposing variation in the issue preferences that US citizens express on s...
An enduring and increasingly acute concern – in an age of polarized parties – is that people’s parti...
"Likert scales" are the most standard and widespread instrument in survey research when measuring pu...
"One of the fundamental uses of surveys is the measurement of policy preferences. We can ask voters ...
If nothing else, democratic politics requires compromise. Mass polarization, where citizens disagree...
Many questions in political science require knowing not only what voters want (pref-erence orientati...
In this paper, we study the measurement of polarization in collective decision making problems with ...
In this paper, we study the measurement of polarization in collective decision making problems with ...
We adapt an axiomatically derived measure of polarization due to Esteban and Ray (1994) to measure p...
The present paper proposes and develops a way of conceptualizing and measuring preference polarizati...
We propose a method for decomposing variation in the issue preferences that US citizens express on s...
The effect of variation in citizens ' policy preferences on salient political outcomes lies at ...
We propose and analyze a general model of simple preference intensity comparisons. The model encompa...
Surveys and opinion polls are essential instruments to elicit societal preferences and uncover diffe...
One of the fundamental uses of surveys is the measurement of policy preferences. We can ask voters ...
We propose a method for decomposing variation in the issue preferences that US citizens express on s...
An enduring and increasingly acute concern – in an age of polarized parties – is that people’s parti...
"Likert scales" are the most standard and widespread instrument in survey research when measuring pu...
"One of the fundamental uses of surveys is the measurement of policy preferences. We can ask voters ...
If nothing else, democratic politics requires compromise. Mass polarization, where citizens disagree...