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Closeness Counts: Increasing Precision and Reducing Errors in Mass Election Predictions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2017
Abstract
Mass election predictions are increasingly used by election forecasters and public opinion scholars. While they are potentially powerful tools for answering a variety of social science questions, existing measures are limited in that they ask about victors rather than voteshares. We show that asking survey respondents to predict voteshares is a viable and superior alternative to asking them to predict winners. After showing respondents can make sensible quantitative predictions, we demonstrate how traditional qualitative forecasts lead to mistaken inferences. In particular, qualitative predictions vastly overstate the degree of partisan bias in election forecasts, and lead to wrong conclusions regarding how political knowledge exacerbates this bias. We also show how election predictions can aid in the use of elections as natural experiments, using the effect of the 2012 election on partisan economic perceptions as an example. Our results have implications for multiple constituencies, from methodologists and pollsters to political scientists and interdisciplinary scholars of collective intelligence.
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- Copyright © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Political Methodology
Footnotes
Authors' note: We thank Eitan Hersh, Krista Loose, Michele Margolis, and Jim Snyder for comments. We also thank the MIT Political Experiments Research Lab for support. Sances thanks the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions at Vanderbilt University for institutional support. This research received IRB approval from the Committee on the Use of Humans as Experimental Subjects at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (protocol #1203004950). Replication data for this article may be found in Sances and Quek (2015). Supplementary Materials for this article are available on the Political Analysis Web site.
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