In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their unobserved characteristics to others. The model is one of rational voting and generates the following predictions: (i) The paradox of not voting does not arise, because the benefit of voting does not vanish with population size. (ii) Turnout in elections is positively related to the size of the local community and the importance of social interactions. (iii) Voting may exhibit bandwagon effects and small changes in the electoral incentives may generate large changes in turnout due to signaling effects. (iv) Signaling incentives increase the sensitivity of turnout to voting incentives in communities with low opportunity cost of social interac...
This paper reports the results of a series of experiments in which the voter turnout decision was an...
Macy's work offers a potential solution to the paradox of voter turnout. The stochastic learning the...
Macy's work offers a potential solution to the paradox of voter turnout. The stochastic learning the...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
For voters with ‘social’ preferences, the expected utility of voting is approximately independent of...
We construct a decision-theoretic model of turnout, in which individuals maximize their subjective e...
Traditional models of why people vote conceptualize voting as a static, self-interested decision. Th...
This paper develops a model of protest voting in which unsatisfied voters may abandon their most-pre...
The so-called "paradox of voting" is major anomaly for rational choice theories of elections. If vot...
This paper develops a model of voter turnout that embeds Riker and Ordeshooks (1968 Am. Pol. Sci. Re...
This paper addresses the paradox of voter turnout, wherein observed voting participation rates are f...
Voter turnout theories based on rational self-interested behavior generally fail to predict signific...
Abstract: Electorate sizes of 20, 40, and 70 subjects are used to test the paradox of voter turnout...
This paper reports the results of a series of experiments in which the voter turnout decision was an...
Macy's work offers a potential solution to the paradox of voter turnout. The stochastic learning the...
Macy's work offers a potential solution to the paradox of voter turnout. The stochastic learning the...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
For voters with ‘social’ preferences, the expected utility of voting is approximately independent of...
We construct a decision-theoretic model of turnout, in which individuals maximize their subjective e...
Traditional models of why people vote conceptualize voting as a static, self-interested decision. Th...
This paper develops a model of protest voting in which unsatisfied voters may abandon their most-pre...
The so-called "paradox of voting" is major anomaly for rational choice theories of elections. If vot...
This paper develops a model of voter turnout that embeds Riker and Ordeshooks (1968 Am. Pol. Sci. Re...
This paper addresses the paradox of voter turnout, wherein observed voting participation rates are f...
Voter turnout theories based on rational self-interested behavior generally fail to predict signific...
Abstract: Electorate sizes of 20, 40, and 70 subjects are used to test the paradox of voter turnout...
This paper reports the results of a series of experiments in which the voter turnout decision was an...
Macy's work offers a potential solution to the paradox of voter turnout. The stochastic learning the...
Macy's work offers a potential solution to the paradox of voter turnout. The stochastic learning the...