Difference between revisions of "Forecasting Elections"
(New page: This is a page for students of PS 240. On October 29th and 31st we discussed election forecasting. '''Possible Exam Questions''' # Nobody has suggested any yet. '''Readings''' L. A...) |
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Lichtman. The keys. | Lichtman. The keys. | ||
| − | :''Summary'': | + | :''Summary'': The keys is a binary forecasting model that does not use any polling data, instead it uses a wide range of indicators. They keys were created in 1981, and have correctly predicted every election from 1860-2008. They keys do not predict the winner of the election, but the popular vote winner. The keys are: Party Mandate, Party Contest, Incumbency, Third Party, Short-Term Economy, Long-Term Economy, Policy Change, Social Unrest, Scandal, Foreign or Military Failure, Foreign or Military Success, Incumbent Charisma/Hero, Challenger Charisma/Hero. |
Sidman, Mak, and Lebo. Non-incumbent elections. | Sidman, Mak, and Lebo. Non-incumbent elections. | ||
:''Summary'': | :''Summary'': | ||
Revision as of 13:15, 19 November 2008
This is a page for students of PS 240. On October 29th and 31st we discussed election forecasting.
Possible Exam Questions
- Nobody has suggested any yet.
Readings
L. Arcuri, Castelli, L., Galdi, S., Zogmaister, C. and Amadori, A. (2008). Predicting the Vote: Implicit Attitudes as Predictors of the Future Behavior of Decided and Undecided Voters. Political Psychology, 29, 369-387.
- Summary:
M.A. Barreto, Streb, M. J., Marks, M. and Guerra, F. (2006). Do Absentee Voters Differ from Polling Place Voters?: New Evidence from California. Public Opinion Quarterly, 70, 224-234.
- Summary:
R.S. Erikson and Wlezien, C. (2008). Are Political Markets really Superior to Polls as Election Predictors? Public opinion quarterly, 72, 190-215.
- Summary:
M.S. Lewis-Beck (2005). Election Forecasting: Principles and Practice. British Journal of Politics & International Relations, 7, 145-164.
- Summary:
From the International Journal of Forecasting
Campbell and Lewis-Beck. An introduction.
- Summary:
Abramowitz. Time-for-change model.
- Summary:
Berg, Nelson, and Rietz. Prediction market accuracy.
- Summary:
Erikson and Wlezien. Economic indicators.
- Summary:
Lewis-Beck and Tien. Changing the model.
- Summary:
Lichtman. The keys.
- Summary: The keys is a binary forecasting model that does not use any polling data, instead it uses a wide range of indicators. They keys were created in 1981, and have correctly predicted every election from 1860-2008. They keys do not predict the winner of the election, but the popular vote winner. The keys are: Party Mandate, Party Contest, Incumbency, Third Party, Short-Term Economy, Long-Term Economy, Policy Change, Social Unrest, Scandal, Foreign or Military Failure, Foreign or Military Success, Incumbent Charisma/Hero, Challenger Charisma/Hero.
Sidman, Mak, and Lebo. Non-incumbent elections.
- Summary: