Public Information: Relevance or Salience?
How does salient public information affect voters’ behavior? In a majoritarian voting game with common preferences, rational voters could use public information as an information device (depending on accuracy) or as a coordination device (regardless of accuracy). A simple lab experiment co...
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doaj-f2f92ebcf5b7470784e44d9df87da4022020-11-25T01:38:34ZengMDPI AGGames2073-43362020-01-01111410.3390/g11010004g11010004Public Information: Relevance or Salience?Giovanna M. Invernizzi0Political Science Department, Columbia University, 420 W 118th St., New York, NY 10027, USAHow does salient public information affect voters’ behavior? In a majoritarian voting game with common preferences, rational voters could use public information as an information device (depending on accuracy) or as a coordination device (regardless of accuracy). A simple lab experiment contradicts both hypotheses − subjects tend to follow public information when it is salient, regardless of the information’s accuracy, but fail to use it as a source of coordination. In particular, it matters whether the information is recent − subjects are more likely to follow public information when it is provided closer to the voting decision. These findings are important because the salience of public information is easily manipulable by political actors.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4336/11/1/4information aggregationcommittee decision makingvoting experimentrecency bias |
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English |
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Article |
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DOAJ |
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Giovanna M. Invernizzi |
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Giovanna M. Invernizzi Public Information: Relevance or Salience? Games information aggregation committee decision making voting experiment recency bias |
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Giovanna M. Invernizzi |
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Giovanna M. Invernizzi |
title |
Public Information: Relevance or Salience? |
title_short |
Public Information: Relevance or Salience? |
title_full |
Public Information: Relevance or Salience? |
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Public Information: Relevance or Salience? |
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Public Information: Relevance or Salience? |
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public information: relevance or salience? |
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MDPI AG |
series |
Games |
issn |
2073-4336 |
publishDate |
2020-01-01 |
description |
How does salient public information affect voters’ behavior? In a majoritarian voting game with common preferences, rational voters could use public information as an information device (depending on accuracy) or as a coordination device (regardless of accuracy). A simple lab experiment contradicts both hypotheses − subjects tend to follow public information when it is salient, regardless of the information’s accuracy, but fail to use it as a source of coordination. In particular, it matters whether the information is recent − subjects are more likely to follow public information when it is provided closer to the voting decision. These findings are important because the salience of public information is easily manipulable by political actors. |
topic |
information aggregation committee decision making voting experiment recency bias |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4336/11/1/4 |
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AT giovannaminvernizzi publicinformationrelevanceorsalience |
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