Are public opinion polls self-fulfilling prophecies?

Psychologists have long observed that people conform to majority opinion, a phenomenon sometimes referred to as the ‘bandwagon effect’. In the political domain people learn about prevailing public opinion via ubiquitous polls, which may produce a bandwagon effect. Newer types of information – published probabilities derived from prediction market contract prices and aggregated polling summaries – may have similar effects. Consequently, polls can become self-fulfilling prophecies whereby majorities, whether in support of candidates or policies, grow in a cascading manner. Despite increased attention to whether the measurement of public opinion can itself affect public opinion, the existing empirical literature is surprisingly limited on the bandwagon effects of polls. To address this gap, we conducted an experiment on a diverse national sample in which we randomly assigned people to receive information about different levels of support for three public policies. We find that public opinion as expressed through polls affects individual-level attitudes, although the size of the effect depends on issue characteristics.

[1]  Diana C. Mutz Mechanisms of Momentum: Does Thinking Make It So? , 1997, The Journal of Politics.

[2]  Robert Navazio An Experimental Approach to Bandwagon Research , 1977 .

[3]  Brian F. Schaffner,et al.  Does Survey Mode Still Matter? Findings from a 2010 Multi-Mode Comparison , 2011, Political Analysis.

[4]  Diana C. Mutz Effects of Horse-Race Coverage on Campaign Coffers: Strategic Contributing in Presidential Primaries , 1995, The Journal of Politics.

[5]  Douglas Rivers,et al.  The 2006 Cooperative Congressional Election Study , 2008 .

[6]  S. Ceci,et al.  Jumping on the Bandwagon with the Underdog: The Impact of Attitude Polls on Polling Behavior , 1982 .

[7]  Vicki G. Morwitz,et al.  Do Polls Reflect Opinions or Do Opinions Reflect Polls? The Impact of Political Polling on Voters' Expectations, Preferences, and Behavior , 1996 .

[8]  Todd G. Shields,et al.  The Vanishing Marginals, the Bandwagon, and the Mass Media , 1994, The Journal of Politics.

[9]  Steven Callander Bandwagons and Momentum in Sequential Voting , 2007 .

[10]  Sibylle Hardmeier,et al.  The Effects of Published Polls on Citizens , 2008 .

[11]  Aaron C. Kay,et al.  Sour Grapes, Sweet Lemons, and the Anticipatory Rationalization of the Status Quo , 2002 .

[12]  C. Marsh Back on the Bandwagon: The Effect of Opinion Polls on Public Opinion , 1985, British Journal of Political Science.

[13]  E. Noelle-Neumann The Spiral of Silence A Theory of Public Opinion , 1974 .

[14]  M. Deutsch,et al.  A study of normative and informational social influences upon individual judgement. , 1955, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[15]  L. Ross,et al.  The “false consensus effect”: An egocentric bias in social perception and attribution processes , 1977 .

[16]  Galen A. Irwin,et al.  What are they Waiting for? Strategic Information for Late Deciding Voters , 2008 .

[17]  D. W. Fleitas Bandwagon and Underdog Effects in Minimal-Information Elections , 1971, American Political Science Review.

[18]  An Investigation of the "Bandwagon Effect" in a College Straw Election , 1962 .

[19]  John H. Aldrich,et al.  "It's the electability, stupid" - or maybe not?: Electability, substance, and strategic voting in presidential primaries , 2007 .

[20]  Edward Brent,et al.  When prophecy bends: The preference–expectation link in U.S. presidential elections, 1952–1980. , 1983 .

[21]  Rebecca B. Morton,et al.  Learning by Voting: Sequential Choices in Presidential Primaries and Other Elections , 2001 .

[22]  R. Tibshirani,et al.  Generalized Additive Models , 1986 .

[23]  Gladys Engel Lang,et al.  The Impact of Polls on Public Opinion , 1984 .

[24]  C. Plott,et al.  From uninformed to informed choices: Voters, pre-election polls and updating , 2012 .

[25]  Lbert Mehrabian Effects of Poll Reports on Voter Preferences , 1998 .

[26]  Donald P. Green,et al.  Field Experiments: Design, Analysis, and Interpretation , 2012 .

[27]  R. Nadeau,et al.  New Evidence About the Existence of a Bandwagon Effect in the Opinion Formation Process , 1993 .

[28]  Aaron C. Kay,et al.  Reactance Versus Rationalization , 2012, Psychological science.

[29]  Stephen Ansolabehere,et al.  Of horseshoes and horse races: Experimental studies of the impact of poll results on electoral behavior , 1994 .

[30]  H. Simon,et al.  American Association for Public Opinion Research Bandwagon and Underdog Effects and the Possibility of Election Predictions , 2009 .

[31]  Ian McAllister,et al.  Bandwagon, Underdog, or Projection? Opinion Polls and Electoral Choice in Britain, 1979-1987 , 1991, The Journal of Politics.

[32]  M. Traugott,et al.  The SAGE Handbook of Public Opinion Research , 2007 .

[33]  Diana C. Mutz Impersonal Influence: How Perceptions of Mass Collectives Affect Political Attitudes , 1998 .

[34]  Larry M. Bartels Presidential Primaries and the Dynamics of Public Choice , 1988 .