Political Scientists routinely rely on self-reports when investigating the effects of political stimuli on behavior. An example of this is found in the American politics work addressing whether campaign advertising mobilizes voters. Findings appear to vary by methodology and are based on varying degrees of self-reports; yet, little attention is paid to the furtive complications that arise when self-reports are used as both dependent and independent variables. In this paper, I demonstrate and attempt to account for the correlated yet unobservable errors that drive self-reports of advertising exposure and political behavior. The results are from a randomized survey experiment involving approximately 1500 respondents. Before the 2002 elections, I showed a professionally developed, non-partisan, get-out-the-vote advertisement to a random subset of a randomly drawn national sample via televisions in their own homes. The analysis shows a great divide between the true effect (using assigned treatment and validated vote) and results using respondent recall of these activities.
The Exaggerated Effects of Advertising on Turnout: The Dangers of Self-Reports* Available to Purchase
* This project was funded by the Center for Investigation and Research on Civic Learning and Education (CIRCLE) at the University of Maryland and Yale University’s Institution of Social and Policy Studies. The Dean of Social Sciences at UCLA provided additional support. I thank the Ad Council and Polimetrix, Inc. for donating their professional services. I appreciate the advice of Don Green, Doug Rivers, and John Zaller, each were critical to the completion of the project. Additional thanks go to Steve Ansolabehere, Alan Gerber, Jon Krosnick, Greg Huber, Markus Prior, Mike Thies, and John Geer who provided useful feedback on various versions of the manuscript. I am particularly grateful to Jennifer A. Blake who looked up every respondent in this study on state voter files to ascertain vote history. Finally, I thank the editors for their suggestions and patience. This project was approved by the UCLA Institutional Review Board Committee on Human Subjects, #G02-10-060-01.
Vavreck L (2008), "The Exaggerated Effects of Advertising on Turnout: The Dangers of Self-Reports*". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 2 No. 4 pp. 325–343, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00006005
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