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      How to Survey About Electoral Turnout? The Efficacy of the Face-Saving Response Items in 19 Different Contexts

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          Abstract

          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 4–8 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 sizes ranging from null to minus 18 percentage points.

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          Overreporting Voting

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            Social Desirability and Response Validity: A Comparative Analysis of Overreporting Voter Turnout in Five Countries

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              Validation: What Big Data Reveal About Survey Misreporting and the Real Electorate

              Social scientists rely on surveys to explain political behavior. From consistent overreporting of voter turnout, it is evident that responses on survey items may be unreliable and lead scholars to incorrectly estimate the correlates of participation. Leveraging developments in technology and improvements in public records, we conduct the first-ever fifty-state vote validation. We parse overreporting due to response bias from overreporting due to inaccurate respondents. We find that nonvoters who are politically engaged and equipped with politically relevant resources consistently misreport that they voted. This finding cannot be explained by faulty registration records, which we measure with new indicators of election administration quality. Respondents are found to misreport only on survey items associated with socially desirable outcomes, which we find by validating items beyond voting, like race and party. We show that studies of representation and participation based on survey reports dramatically misestimate the differences between voters and nonvoters.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Political Science Research and Methods
                PSRM
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                2049-8470
                2049-8489
                July 2017
                July 8 2016
                : 5
                : 03
                : 575-584
                Article
                10.1017/psrm.2016.31
                90d9107b-020f-4041-93cb-4db81f68b9c0
                © 2016
                History

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