In this paper we report results of an initial attempt to test the theory of expressive voting. Our experiment involves requiring subjects to vote between receiving SA in cash or having $B donated to charity on their behalf. Across subjects we vary the probability that their vote will decide which di
A further experimental study of expressive voting
โ Scribed by A. J. Fischer
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 686 KB
- Volume
- 88
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0048-5829
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Do people vote in elections for reasons that have nothing to do with the possibility that their own vote may decide the result of the election? That is, do they vote for "expressive" reasons? There is no hard evidence in the real world which bears on this question. The nearest one can come to an answer is to ask people about why they have voted, but what people say they do is not necessarily the same as their behavior, which cannot be observed on this issue in real voting situations. The existence, or otherwise, of expressive voting is an important question, because the answer provides insights into explaining voter turnout (i.e. to help explain why people vote), as well as whether their vote ever changes as a result of a change in the probability that their vote will decide-the election (i.e. to help explain what people vote). By conducting an appropriate experiment, however, direct evidence of whether some people vote expressively may be obtained. This paper describes such an experiment, and gives clear evidence for the existence of expressive voting.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Two very different mechanisms of folding have been proposed from experimental studies of disulfide formation in reduced ribonuclease A. (1) A pathway in which the rate-limiting step separates fully folded protein from all other disulfide intermediates and occurs solely in three-disulfide intermediat
This communication is a sequel to the one recently published in this journal on the innervation of the m. obliquus superior oculi of the cat (Wilkinson, '30b), and completes an account of work commenced at the Institute of Neurology, Northwestern University, Chicago. This consisted of a repetition o