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Subject: AEJ 95 SimonJ CTM Telling the truth
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Thu, 1 Feb 1996 12:12:09 EST
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Telling the truth
 
 
 
 
TELLING THE TRUTH
TELLING THE TRUTH:
RESPONDENT ACCURACY IN MASS MEDIA POLLING
 
 
        Public opinion polls fulfill several functions for the mass media. They
 
            can serve as the first measure of citizen opinion on an emerging
issue;
 
            1 allow reporters to explore the context in which events take place;
2
 
            and enable news organizations to make news as well as report it.3
 
       Journalists and social scientists use polls in different manners, with
 
            the former emphasizing their immediate news value and the latter
 
      focusing on their value in explaining a general social process.4 Media
 
            coverage of polls has been criticized for serving as a form of
 
    "checkbook journalism"; 5 for encouraging politicians and government
 
          policy makers to make decisions based on short-term, parochial
 
    interests;6 and for failing to fully inform readers about a poll's
 
        methodology7 or the significance of the findings.8
        Journalists and social scientists share a desire to ensure that poll
 
           data accurately reflect the views of the public. Attempts to ensure
 
         accuracy can be affected by a concern that goes to the heart of the
 
         issue of validity in survey research: whether the respondents are
 
       telling the truth about the issues on which they comment.  Survey
 
       researchers "rarely go beyond self-report"9  in ascertaining whether
 
          respondents are telling the truth during an interview. More than 50
 
         years ago, Herbert Hyman summarized the concern of survey researchers
in
 
            the title of his paper, "Do They Tell the Truth".10 That concern has
not
 
            changed and has been underscored by the transformation of survey
 
      research from a tool for academic researchers to an instrument that
 
         helps shape political campaigns11 and public policy.12
        Despite the reliance on self-reporting, relatively little is known
 
         about the accuracy of the self-reporting method of data collection.13
 
           More emphasis has been given to the twin issue of the reliability of
 
          self-reports than to their validity.14 Validation studies have been
done
 
            on such sensitive issues as drug use, bankruptcies and arrests for
 
        drunken driving,15 as well as voting.16 There is evidence that socially
 
            desirable activities like voter registration, voting and charitable
 
         contributions tend to be over-reported, while undesirable experiences
 
           like bankruptcy tend to be under-reported. 17 In voting validation
 
        projects, the process of double checking turnout levels is difficult,
 
           expensive and time-consuming and can generate information on only a
 
         limited number of variables in a survey (e.g., voting turnout) that are
 
            verifiable.18 The National Election Study, which validated
self-reported
 
            turnout in past elections, chose not to do so in 1992. In
            media-sponsored polls, the need to make deadlines makes record
 
    validation checks on poll data even less likely. 19
        The tendency of respondents to inflate their self-reports on voting has
been a chronic problem in public opinion polling. Wolfinger and
 
     Rosenstone reported that since 1948, "reported turnout in national
 
        post-election surveys has never been less than 5% higher than the best
 
            estimate of the true turnout figure, and the gap between reported
and
 
           actual turnout has sometimes approached 20%".20 Four efforts by the
 
         National Election Study to validate turnout records found between 20%
 
           and 30% of respondents over-reported voting.21 Other studies
suggested
 
            that in terms of self-reported voting behavior, from 12% to 15% of
 
        respondents provided inaccurate responses after their answers were
 
        compared to official voting records.22
        There is less agreement regarding which respondent characteristics and
 
            attitudes might be significant predictors of misreporting of voting.
 
          Some studies have found respondents who were inaccurate in describing
 
           their voting behavior matched the profile of non-voters in general:
 
         young, lower income, non-white citizens with lower political
interest.23
 
            Other researchers suggest that inaccurate reporters of votes were
not
 
           different from actual voters in terms of characteristics and
attitudes.
 
            24 For example, Tittle and Hill concluded that "in every instance,
those
 
            incorrectly claiming that they had voted resembled more closely the
 
         actual voters than nonvoters." 25 A recent study found education had an
 
            independent effect on voter misreporting: the better educated felt
more
 
            pressure to misreport their vote because of social desirability.26
        Little work has been done on two other potential explanations for the
 
            variance in accuracy of self-reports: the respondents' level of
 
     involvement with the news media and their attitudes toward the accuracy
 
            of polling in general. Respondents who attend to the news media on a
 
          regular basis and those who generally believe polls to be accurate
would
 
            be expected to be more likely to be accurate in their responses than
 
          their counterparts due to a desire to avoid distorting the news
reports
 
            and the polls they find useful and reliable.
        This study attempts to clarify the conflicting evidence on whether
 
         inaccurate respondents are significantly different from accurate
 
      respondents. It offers an initial exploration of whether media exposure
 
            and attitudes toward polling significantly affect the accuracy of
 
       responses. The study, based on self-reported turnout levels among
 
       Arizona voters in the 1992 presidential election, also addresses a
 
        broader question: given the high cost of validation checks to ensure
 
          accuracy of poll results, does the level of misreporting justify the
 
          effort required to validate poll results.
Method
        The study was based on a two-stage research project. The first stage
 
           involved conducting a statewide telephone survey of 639 registered
 
        voters in Arizona between Nov. 4-11, the week after the 1992
 
  presidential election. The survey was conducted as part of an ongoing
 
           polling program in the Media Research Program of the Department of
 
        Journalism and Telecommunication at Arizona State University. It was
 
          conducted in conjunction with public television station KAET-TV, whose
 
            volunteers were trained to make the telephone calls under the
training
 
            and direct supervision of the Media Research Program.
        Respondents were asked to address a variety of issues, including
 
       whether they had voted in the preceding week's election. They
 
   represented a systematic random sample of voters generated from a list
 
            of all registered voters in the state. A comparison of the
demographic
 
            characteristics of the sample statistics to known population
parameters
 
            indicated the sample was representative
of the electorate.  The overall confidence interval for the sample,
 
         based on a 95% confidence level and dichotomous answers estimated at
 
          .50, is plus or minus 3.9% on responses from the entire sample and
 
        higher for responses from subgroups.
        The second stage of the study was based on a validation check to
 
       determine whether respondents actually voted.  The authors validated
 
          self-reported information on voting by examining voting records at
each
 
            of the state's county voter registration offices. Of the 639
original
 
           respondents, 592 (92%) were successfully validated; the remainder
were
 
            removed from the study. The major cause of the 47 voters not being
 
        validated was differences between the name of the person as offered
 
         during the initial telephone survey and the formal registration name on
 
            the records; when the names did not precisely match, the respondents
 
          were dropped from the survey.
        Accurate and inaccrate respondents were then analyzed based on their
 
           demographic characteristics, media use patterns,  political
 
 characteristics and attitudes toward polling in general. Due to the
 
         nominal nature of the dependent variable, Cramer's V, a Chi-Square
based
 
            measure, was used to measure the level of association.  It can
attain
 
           the value of 1 for tables of any dimension, thereby facilitating
 
      comparisons across studies.
        The high turnout in the 1992 presidential contest, which reduced the
 
           number of non-voters who might overstate their vote, served as a
 
      limiting factor for this study. Turnout in Arizona reached 75.7% of
 
         registered voters, up from 68.1% in 1988.27  A lower turnout level
would
 
            have resulted in more non-voters who might have been tempted to tell
 
          interviewers they had voted so as to be associated with a socially
 
        desirable activity. Similarly, the use of only registered voters as the
 
            subjects for the study also may have limited the variance in
accuracy of
 
            responses; if non-registered voters also had been included, the
social
 
            desirability associated with voting may have prompted a greater
 
     percentage of non-registered voters to say they cast a ballot. Finally,
 
            the study also may have been affected by the accuracy of the master
list
 
            of voters from which the sample was drawn. The list was generated in
 
          early October and did not include all final registrants.
Results
        The results of the self-reported voting and the validated voting levels
 
            are presented in Table 1. The validation check showed that 7.6% of
 
        registered voters in Arizona misrepresented their voting activity after
 
            the 1992 presidential election, while 92.4% accurately reported
whether
 
            they had cast a ballot. Of the 41 inaccurate respondents, 39 claimed
to
 
            have voted while the validation check showed they had not done so.
 
        Interestingly, two respondents said they had not voted while the
 
      validation check indicated they had done so.
        The analysis then turned to independent variables that may help explain
 
            the variance in the accuracy of the self-reports. The initial
analysis
 
            of five demographic variables shown in Table 2 found two -- race and
age
 
            -- were significantly related to the accuracy of responses (although
at
 
            the weak levels of V=.12, p < .01 for race and V=.11, p < .05 for
age).
 
            Non-white respondents and younger respondents appeared less likely
to be
 
            accurate in reporting whether they voted.
        The initial analysis then looked at the media use patterns of
 
    respondents
and the accuracy of responses on voting to see if higher media exposure
 
            levels were associated with higher levels of accuracy. The survey
asked
 
            respondents how many days per week they "watch the evening news on
TV"
 
            and read a newspaper; it also asked how much attention they paid to
each
 
            task. None of the relationships were statistically significant.
        Seven political characteristics were examined, ranging from
 
  respondents' voting history to their ideology and candidate choice.
 
         Three of the variables were found to be significantly related in the
 
          initial analysis to voting accuracy, again at relatively weak levels:
 
           party affiliation (V=.12, p < .05), whether the person registered to
 
          vote this year (V=.15, p < .01), and choice of presidential candidate
 
           (V=.12, p < .05). Political independents, newly registered voters and
 
           those supporting Clinton appeared to be less likely to be accurate in
 
           reporting whether they voted.
        Finally, four additional questions were examined to see if a person's
 
            overall view toward public opinion polling would be related to the
 
        accuracy of their self-reported vote. Respondents were asked to estimate
 
            whether most people lied to pollsters, if polls were inherently
 
     inaccurate, if polls have little influence and if they follow polls
 
         much. None of the indicators were significantly correlated with whether
 
            the respondent accurately reported their vote.
        In summary, the initial data analysis suggested that five of the
 
       characteristics and attitudes most closely associated in the literature
 
            with high turnout -- non-minority group members, older voters,
 
    registered Republicans, not newly registered voters and those supporting
 
            a Republican candidate --  also were associated with accurate
reporting
 
            of their activities on Election Day.
        These five variables were then reexamined while controlling for any
 
          intervening impact of education, as shown in Table 3. This secondary
 
          analysis showed none of the relationships remained significant across
 
           the four education levels examined. Ironically, education by itself
was
 
            not found to be significantly related to accuracy of responses on
 
       turnout in the initial analysis.  But as an intervening variable,
 
       education explained much of the variance in accuracy, especially due to
 
            the tendency of those respondents with a high school education or
less
 
            to vote at much lower levels than those with more schooling.
Therefore,
 
            the initial significant relationships between characteristics and
 
       attitudes and a voter's accuracy proved to be spurious in the secondary
 
            analysis.
Discussion
 
        This study suggests that several potential problems related to
 
     over-reporting of turnout may be less significant than expected.
 
      Differences between accurate and inaccurate respondents in terms of
 
         demographic characteristics, media use patterns and political
 
   characteristics were found to be non-significant or spurious. Even a
 
          respondent's feeling on whether people generally lie to pollsters did
 
           not have a significant relationship as to whether they then lied to
the
 
            pollster in the context of this study.
        Some earlier studies of vote over-reporting did find several variables
 
            were significant predictors of overstated turnout, including age28,
race
 
            29, party affiliation and participation in earlier elections.30
However,
 
            the results here are similar to other studies31 that found no
 
   significant differences between accurate and non-accurate respondents in
 
            terms of self-reported voting behavior. The similarity between the
two
 
            groups persisted even after this study examined two additional sets
of
 
            independent variables: respondents' media exposure levels and
attitudes
 
            toward polling.
        The present results echoed the conclusion of Sigelman, who suggested
 
           "it seems safe to say that researchers who fit models of voting using
 
           self-reported rather than validated data would not be led very far
 
        astray in terms of what they conclude about the overall extent to which
 
            voting is related to demographic and
political characteristics." 32
        While validated results would always be the preferred method of data
 
           analysis, the results of this study suggest that the high cost of the
 
           process and the quality of the validation itself should be weighed by
 
           the researcher. For this small Arizona study, it took about 100 hours
 
           and about $1,000 to contact all county boards of elections and
validate
 
            the records of 639 registered voters. This effort yielded only 41
 
       individuals who inaccurately reported their vote, and their
 
 characteristics and attitudes were not significantly different than
 
         those respondents who did accurately report their vote. The high cost
of
 
            the validation process, coupled with the need for news organizations
to
 
            report poll results quickly, makes record validation checks on poll
data
 
            less attractive.33  In this study, the high cost of validation and
the
 
            lack of significant differences between accurate and non-accurate
 
       respondents -- even on such issues as their media use or views toward
 
           polling -- offers additional evidence that the process may not be
worth
 
            the effort.
        Finally, the accuracy of the validated records themselves may not
 
        always be valid, further limiting the value of the checking process.
 
          Presser and Traugott warn "the standard against which responses are
 
         validated may itself contain errors. ... At least some of the record
 
          entries are probably in error, and mistakes may have been made in
 
       matching survey cases to record cases." 34
        So while the journalist and the academic continue to share a desire to
 
            maximize accuracy of polls, this study suggests one traditional
method
 
            --
validating whether a respondent actually voted in an election -- does
 
           not yield enough significant information as to justify the effort.
The
 
            lack of significant differences between respondents who told the
truth
 
            and those who did not reduces any distortion caused by inclusion of
both
 
            in a survey. The time and effort consumed by such validation checks
 
         might be better spent on the many other issues associated with
 
    maximizing the reliability and validity of polling.
 
Notes
 
        1. Richard Morin, "Polls: When Are They The News?" Washington Post
 
         syndicated story, published in The Record of Stockton, CA (Dec. 21,
 
         1994): A13.
        2. David H. Weaver and Maxwell E. McCombs, "Journalism and Social
 
        Science: A New Relationship?" Public Opinion Quarterly 44 (1980):
 
       477-494.
        3. Morin, "Polls: When," A13. Burns W. Roper, "Evaluating the Polls
 
          with Poll Data," Public Opinion Quarterly 50 (1986): 10-16.
        4. J. Ronald Milavsky, "Improving the Public's Opinion of Public
 
       Opinion," Public Opinion Quarterly 51 (1987): 436-447. Everett C. Ladd,
 
            "Polling and the Press: The Clash of the Institutional Imperatives,"
 
          Public Opinion Quarterly 44 (1980): 574-584.
        5. Nicholas Von Hoffman, "Public Opinion Polls: Newspapers Making Their
 
            Own News?" Public Opinion Quarterly 44 (Winter 1980): 572-583.
        6. Albert E. Gollin, "Polling and the News Media," Public Opinion
 
        Quarterly 51 (1987): S86-S94. David L. Paletz, Jonathan Y. Short, Helen
 
            Baker, Barbara Cookman Campbell, Richard J. Cooper, and Rochelle M.
 
         Oeslander, "Polls in the Media: Content, Credibility, and
Consequences,"
 
            Public Opinion Quarterly 44 (Winter 1980): 495-513. James Fallows,
"The
 
            User's Perspective: Round Table on the Impact of Polls" in Polling
on
 
           the Issues, ed. Albert W. Cantril (Washington, DC: Seven Locks,
1980):
 
            514-529.
        7. Ladd, "Polling and," 574-584. M. Mark Miller and Robert Hurd,
 
       "Conformity to AAPOR Standards in Newspaper Reporting of Public Opinion
 
            Polls," Public Opinion Quarterly 46 (Summer 1982): 243-249.
        8. Milavsky, "Improving the," 436-447. Gerhart D. Wiebe, "The New York
 
            Times and Public Opinion Research: A Criticism," Journalism
Quarterly 44
 
            (1967): 654-658.
        9. Jean M. Converse, Survey Research in the United States: Roots and
 
           Emergence 1890-1960. (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press,
 
         1987), 415.
        10. Herbert H. Hyman, "Do They Tell the Truth?" Public Opinion
 
     Quarterly 8 (1944): 557-559.
        11. Golin, "Polling and," 86-94.
        12. Ladd, "Polling and,"  574-584.
        13. Stanley Presser & Michael Traugott, "Little White Lies and Social
 
            Science Models," Public Opinion Quarterly 56 (1992): 77-86.
        14. Donald G. Granberg and Soren Holmberg, "Self-Reported Turnout and
 
            Voter Validation," American Journal of Political Science 35 (1991):
 
         448-459.
        15. Norman M. Bradburn, Seymour Sudman & Associates, Improving
 
     Interview Method and Questionnaire Design: Response Effects to
 
    Threatening Questions in Survey Research. (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass,
 
            1979).
        16. Presser and Traugott, "Little White Lies," 77-86. Brian D. Silver,
 
            Paul R. Abramson and Barbara. A. Anderson, "The Presence of Others
and
 
            Over-Reporting in American National Elections. Public Opinion
Quarterly
 
            50 (1986): 228-239. Michael W. Traugott and John P. Katosh,
"Response
 
           Validity in Surveys on Voting Behavior," Public Opinion Quarterly 43
 
          (1979): 359-377. Aage R. Clausen, "Response Validity: Vote Report."
 
         Public Opinion Quarterly 32 (1968): 588-606.
        17. Stanley Presser, "Can Changes in Context Reduce Vote Overreporting
 
            in Surveys?" Public Opinion Quarterly 54 (1990): 586-593. Peter V.
 
        Miller and Robert M. Groves, "Matching Survey Responses to Official
 
         Records: An Exploration of Validity in Victimization Reporting." Public
 
            Opinion Quarterly 49 (1985): 366-380.
        18. Presser and Traugott, "Little White Lies," 77-86.
        19. Arnold H. Ismach, "Polling as a News-Gathering Tool." The Annals
 
           472 (March 1984): 106-118. John N. Rippey, "Use of Polls as a
Reporting
 
            Tool," Journalism Quarterly 57 (Winter 1980): 642-646, 721.
        20. Raymond E. Wolfinger & Steven J. Rosenstone, Who Votes? (New Haven,
 
            CT: Yale University Press, 1980), 115.
        21. Presser, "Can Changes," 586-593.
        22. Traugott and Katosh, "Response Validity," 359-377. Presser and
 
         Traugott, "Little White Lies," 77-86. Silver, Anderson and Abramson,
 
          "The Presence," 228-239.
        23. Traugott and Katosh, "Response Validity," 359-377. John P. Katosh
 
            and Michael W. Traugott, "The Consequences of Validated and
 
 Self-Reported Voting Measures," Public Opinion Quarterly 45 (1981):
 
         519-535.
        24. Silver, Anderson and Abramson, "The Presence," 228-239. C. R.
 
        Tittle & R. J. Hill, "The Accuracy of Self-Reported Data and Prediction
 
            of Political Activity, Public Opinion Quarterly 31 (1967): 103-106.
Lee
 
            Sigelman, "The Nonvoting Voter in Voting Research," American Journal
of
 
            Political Science 26 (1982): 47-56.
        25. Tittle and Hill, "The Accuracy," 104.
        26. Presser and Traugott, "Little White Lies," 77-86.
        27. Royce Crocker, "Voter Registration and Turnout, 1948-1992,"
 
      Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress (1993): CRS-22.
        28. Traugott and Katosh, "Response Validity," 359-377.
        29. Sigelman, "The Non-Voting Voter," 47-56.
        30. Traugott and Katosh, "Response Validity," 359-377.
        31. Silver, Anderson and Abramson, "The Presence," 228-239. Tittle and
 
            Hill, "The Accuracy," 103-106.
        32. Sigelman, "The Non-Voting Voter," 53.
        33. Ismach, "Polling as," 106-118. Rippey, "Use of," 642-646.
        34. Presser and Traugott, "Little White Lies," 78.
 
 TABLE 1
Results of Validation Check of Voting Records
 
                                               % of all                         n
                                              respondents
______________________________________________________________________________
 
Accurate Respondents
 
Reported did vote,                              90.0%                           487
Validated did vote
 
Reported did not vote,                    2.4%                            13
Validated did not vote
 
 
Inaccurate Respondents
 
Reported did vote,                               7.2%                             39
Validated did not vote
 
Reported did not vote,                   0.4%                              2
Validated did vote
 
 
 
                                                                                n=541
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
TABLE 2
Characteristics of Accurate vs. Non-Accurate Respondents
 
                                                Non-
                                Accurate        Accurate        Total            n               V*
 
1. Demographic
Characteristic
 
White                           94%               6%            100%            490             .12##
Non-white                       84%             16%             100%             70
 
Age
  18-45                 90%             10%             100%            460             .11#
  45 +                          95%               5%            100%            282
 
Education
  < High school                 90%             10%             100%            124             .05
  Some college                  94%               6%            100%            203
  College graduate                      93%               7%            100%            139
  Post-graduate                 91%               9%            100%              68
 
  Male                                  91%               9%            100%            214                     .04
  Female                                        93%               7%            100%            325
 
Protestant                                      96%               4%            100%            183                     .11
Catholic                                        90%             10%             100%            126
Mormon                                  97%               3%            100%              37
Other                                           90%             10%             100%              89
No relig pref.                                  90%             10%             100%              90
 
 
2. Media use characteristics
 
Days/week  watch
evening news on TV
0 days                          92%               8%            100%             25                     .09
1                                       93%               7%            100%             27
2                                       85%             15%             100%             33
3                                       93%               7%            100%             58
4                                       90%             10%             100%             52
5                                       91%               9%            100%             86
6                                       94%               6%            100%             49
7                                       94%               6%            100%            206
 
Attention paid to TV
cvg. of pres. campaign
  A great deal                  92%               8%            100%            201                     .05
  Quite a bit                           92%               8%            100%            147
  Some                          94%               6%            100%            116
  Very little                           91%               9%            100%             .43
  None                          90%             10%             100%             .20
 
                                                Non-
                            Accurate            Accurate        Total           n                V*
 
Days/week
read newspaper
0 days                   95%              5%            100%             42                     .12
1                                88%            12%             100%             41
2                                90%            10%             100%             38
3                                86%            14%             100%             42
4                               100%              0%            100%             23
5                                91%              9%            100%             44
6                                90%            10%             100%             29
7                                94%              6%            100%            271
 
Attention paid to newsp.
cvg. of pres. campaign
  A great deal          97%               3%            100%            141                     .11
  Quite a bit                   90%             10%             100%            130
  Some                  90%             10%             100%            134
  Very little                   92%               8%            100%             67
  None                  93%               7%            100%             43
 
 
3. Political characteristics
 
Republican                      96%               4%            100%            254                     .12#
Democrat                        90%             10%             100%            231
Other                           85%             15%             100%            48
 
Registered to
vote this year
  Yes                           86%             14%             100%            154                     .15##
  No                            95%               5%            100%            376
 
Presidential choice
  Bush                  96%               4%            100%            199                     .12#
  Clinton                       89%             11%             100%            194
  Perot                 93%               7%            100%             99
 
Voting frequency
in past 10 years
  All elections         95%               5%            100%            302                     .12
  Half of election              90%             10%             100%            158
  Less than half                89%             11%             100%            45
  First time voted              84%             16%             100%            19
 
Whether it was
person's first time
voting
  Yes                           90%             10%             100%             29                     .03
  No                            93%               7%            100%            487
 
 
 
                                                Non-
                            Accurate            Accurate        Total           n                V*
 
How closely
respondent
follows politics
  Extremely closely             94%               6%            100%            116                     .13
  Very closely          95%               6%            100%            206
  Somewhat closely      90%             10%             100%            174
  Not very close                93%               7%            100%              28
  Not closely at all            78%             22%             100%              11
 
Conservative            94%               6%            100%            201                     .09
Moderate                        92%               8%            100%            254
Liberal                 87%             13%             100%              68
 
 
4. Attitudes toward public opinion polling
 
Influence of polls
  no influence          93%               7%            100%              94                    .06
  some influence                94%               6%            100%            181
  a lot of influence            91%               9%            100%            165
  a great deal of infl. 96%               4%            100%             68
 
Are people truthful
in talking to pollsters
  never                 83%               7%            100%             12                     .10
  seldom                        90%             10%             100%             92
  most time                     95%               5%            100%            313
  all time                      89%             11%             100%             56
 
How accurate are polls
in the media
  extremely accurate    93%               7%            100%              14                    .05
  very accurate         96%               4%            100%              66
  generally accurate    92%               8%            100%            271
  not very accurate     93%               7%            100%            122
  not accurate at all   93%               7%            100%              15
 
How much do you
follow media polls
  frequently                    96%               4%            100%              74                    .05
  often                 92%               8%            100%            113
  seldom                        92%               8%            100%            214
  never                 93%               7%            100%            118
 
_______________________
Measure of association expressed by Cramer V
# p < .05
## p < .01
 TABLE 3
 
Strength of Association, Respondent Characteristics Vs. Turnout Accuracy,
Controlling for Education
 
                        < High                  Some                    College         Post
                        School                  College         Grad                    Graduate
 
                                V            p          V           p           V          p            V          p
 
Race                    .37     <.001           .03     >.05            .09     >.05            .16     <.001
 
Age                     .22      <.05           .08      >.05           .07     >.05            .11     >.05
 
Party                   .28     <.01            .09     >.05            .11     >.05            .10     >.05
Register                .09     >.05            .19     <.01            .16     >.05            .19     >.05
this year
 
Presidential            .15     >.05            .10     >.05            .12     >.05            .10     >.05
preference
 
________________________________________
Measure of association expressed by Cramer V.

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