Academic literature on the topic 'Voting Correctly'

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Journal articles on the topic "Voting Correctly"

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Lau, Richard R., and David P. Redlawsk. "Voting Correctly." American Political Science Review 91, no. 3 (September 1997): 585–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2952076.

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The average voter falls far short of the prescriptions of classic democratic theory in terms of interest, knowledge, and participation in politics. We suggest a more realistic standard: Citizens fulfill their democratic duties if, most of the time, they vote “correctly.” Relying on an operationalization of correct voting based on fully informed interests, we present experimental data showing that, most of the time, people do indeed manage to vote correctly. We also show that voters' determinations of their correct vote choices can be predicted reasonably well with widely available survey data. We illustrate how this measure can be used to determine the proportion of the electorate voting correctly, which we calculate at about 75% for the five American presidential elections between 1972 and 1988. With a standard for correct vote decisions, political science can turn to exploring the factors that make it more likely that people will vote correctly.
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Richey, Sean. "The Social Basis of Voting Correctly." Political Communication 25, no. 4 (November 18, 2008): 366–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10584600802426973.

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Dassonneville, Ruth, Mary K. Nugent, Marc Hooghe, and Richard Lau. "Do Women Vote Less Correctly? The Effect of Gender on Ideological Proximity Voting and Correct Voting." Journal of Politics 82, no. 3 (July 2020): 1156–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/707525.

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WATTS, ALISON. "The influence of social networks and homophily on correct voting." Network Science 2, no. 1 (April 2014): 90–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/nws.2014.1.

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AbstractThere is empirical evidence suggesting that a person's family, friends, or social ties influence who a person votes for. Sokhey & McClurg (2012) find that as political disagreement in a person's social network increases, then a person is less likely to vote correctly. We develop a model where voters have different favorite policies and wish to vote correctly for the candidate whose favorite policy is closest to their own. Voters have beliefs about each candidate's favorite policy which may or may not be correct. Voters update their beliefs about political candidates based on who their conservative and liberal social ties are supporting. We find that if everyone's social network consists only of those most like themselves, then the conditions needed for correct voting to be stable are fairly weak; thus political agreement in one's social network facilitates correct voting. We also give conditions under which correct voting is stable for networks exhibiting homophily and for networks exhibiting random social interactions.
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Koford, Kenneth. "Dimensions in Congressional Voting." American Political Science Review 83, no. 3 (September 1989): 949–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1962068.

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While dimensional studies of congressional voting find a single, ideological dimension, regression estimates find several constituency and party dimensions in addition to ideology. I rescale several unidimensional studies to show their increased classification success over the null hypothesis that votes are not unidimensional. Several null hypotheses are explored. With these null hypotheses, 66%–75% of nonunidimensional roll call votes are nevertheless correctly classified by one dimension. After the rescaling, one dimension succeeds in correctly classifying 25%–50% of the votes, and second and third dimensions are important.
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Bergbower, Matthew L. "Campaign Intensity and Voting Correctly in Senate Elections." Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties 24, no. 1 (August 25, 2013): 90–114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17457289.2013.824894.

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Blais, André, Simon Labbé St-Vincent, Jean-Benoit Pilet, and Rafael Treibich. "Voting correctly in lab elections with monetary incentives." Party Politics 22, no. 4 (December 8, 2014): 544–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354068814560933.

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PELC, ANDRZEJ. "VOTING MECHANISMS IN ASYNCHRONOUS BYZANTINE ENVIRONMENTS." Parallel Processing Letters 16, no. 01 (March 2006): 93–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s0129626406002496.

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A source sends a piece of data (message), relayed to a receiver by n processes, some of which can be faulty. We assume that the number of faulty processes is at most f and that faulty processes exhibit a Byzantine behavior. A deciding agent has to make a decision concerning the source message, on the basis of results obtained from the receiver. The environment is totally asynchronous. An Asynchronous Byzantine Voting Mechanism is a method that enables the deciding agent to always correctly determine the source message in this scenario. We show that there exists a correct Asynchronous Byzantine Voting Mechanism if and only if f < n/3. If this condition is satisfied, we provide such a mechanism. This result should be contrasted with the feasibility of synchronous voting mechansisms, in which the receiver can wait until all fault-free processes convey their values: for this scenario a correct voting mechanism exists whenever f < n/2.
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Nai, Alessandro. "The Maze and the Mirror: Voting Correctly in Direct Democracy." Social Science Quarterly 96, no. 2 (April 23, 2015): 465–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ssqu.12154.

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Blais, André, and Anja Kilibarda. "Correct Voting and Post-Election Regret." PS: Political Science & Politics 49, no. 04 (October 2016): 761–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1049096516001372.

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ABSTRACTRegret is a basic affect associated with individual choice. While much research in organizational science and consumer behavior has assessed the precedents and consequents of regret, little attention has been paid to regret in political science. The present study assesses the relationship between one of the most democratically consequential forms of political behavior—voting—and feelings of regret. We examine the extent to which citizens regret how they voted after doing so and the factors that might lead one individual to be more regretful than another. Relying on surveys in five different countries after 11 regional and national elections, we find not only that political information leads to a decrease in post-election regret, but also that having voted correctly, or having voted in accordance with one’s underlying preferences regardless of information, similarly mitigates regret. The effect of correct voting on regret is greater among the least informed.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Voting Correctly"

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Reilly, Shauna Frances Lee. "Meaningful Choices? Understanding and Participation in Direct Democracy in the American States." Digital Archive @ GSU, 2009. http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/political_science_diss/11.

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What role does political knowledge play in campaigning for and participation in direct democracy? A foundational principle of democracy is citizen participation in decision-making. This foundation assumes that citizens are at least somewhat knowledgeable about government and able to make informed choices. This analysis examines the role that meaningful decisions play in direct democracy, because “for voters to make meaningful decisions, they must understand the options on which they are deciding” (Dalton 1988: 13). This analysis uses three different methodologies to investigate this relationship. First, through qualitative analysis and a mail survey of petitioners, this study explores how petitioners view and approach the public. This study finds that expectations of political knowledge affects how petitioners approach the public and how much time they spend educating the public about their initiative. Second, through statistical (multi-level regression) analysis, this study investigates the impact of the ballot language on participation in individual ballot propositions. This study finds that ballot language is a significant barrier to participation. Third, through experimental analysis, this study connects measures of political knowledge and participation on ballot propositions written by petitioners across the country. This study finds that when confronted with more difficult ballot language voters are less likely to participate. However, when controlling for political knowledge this effect is truncated. The findings of this analysis argue the elite bias of direct democracy in ballot language, accessibility, and motives of petitioners. The study of participation in direct democracy and political knowledge across American states advances the theoretical understanding of democratic participation, and furthers our understanding of the role citizen political knowledge plays in policymaking.
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Reimink, Elwin. "Electoral reform: why care? Opinion formation and vote choice in six referendums on electoral reform." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209040.

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This PhD thesis explores the question how citizens react when they are confronted with complex institutional questions related to politics. Specifically, we look at how citizens vote when they are asked for their opinion in a referendum on amending the electoral system of their country. Traditionally, electoral systems have been considered the political playing ground of political elites. It is hence interesting to see what happens when the ‘power of decision’ shifts to citizens, who are supposed to have little interest in, or knowledge about, electoral systems. We observe that citizens partially mimic political elites in their behaviour, by following partisan considerations: citizens judge electoral reforms on the consequences for their favoured parties. Moreover, citizens tend to incorporate values when judging electoral reforms: a particular effect is caused by the left-right-distinction, with left-wing voters being more attracted towards more proportional systems. Finally, we observe that how citizens react to electoral systems is affected by their baseline knowledge on politics. More knowledgeable citizens tend to judge more on substantial grounds, while less knowledgeable citizens rather tend to judge on miscellaneous grounds. We conclude by arguing that citizens can and do form substantial opinions on complex subjects like institutional reforms, but that some baseline knowledge is nonetheless required in order to substantially participate in the democratic decision-making process.
Doctorat en Sciences politiques et sociales
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Books on the topic "Voting Correctly"

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Groshev, Igor', Yuliya Davydova, and Anton Gorbenko. Psychology of regional elections: candidates and voters. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1163948.

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The monograph is devoted to the study of the socio-psychological features of regional elections that influence the socio-political behavior of the electorate. The authors propose a new understanding of the psychological nature of the processes of forming the voting choice, which brings us closer to a more correct understanding of the complex political and psychological mechanisms of the strategy and tactics of regional election campaigns. The identified individual and personal indicators of the influence of the electoral characteristics of candidates on the voting of various categories of voters were developed and tested at the regional level. A number of practical recommendations on the organization of election campaigns, designed to take into account the psychological specifics of the behavior of the electorate in the framework of regional elections (elections with weak content), are empirically proved. It is intended for managers and specialists of regional election commissions, political scientists and psychologists who study issues related to the patterns of electoral behavior, graduate students and undergraduates engaged in research in the field of political psychology, as well as political strategists who ensure the effectiveness of election campaigns.
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Thurber, Timothy N. Forgotten Architects of the Second Reconstruction. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036866.003.0009.

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This chapter analyzes how the Republican Party responded to two central demands—economic opportunity and voting rights—of the modern African American freedom struggle from the 1940s through the early 1970s. It argues that scholars have underestimated the role of the Republican Party in shaping the Second Reconstruction. Liberal Democrats and civil rights organizations had to respond to what Republicans believed about the role of race in American life and the place of federal authority in racial matters, as they struggled to get legislation through Congress and approved by the White House. Republican support, they correctly believed, was essential to what did become law. At the same time, a critical mass of the Republican Party was willing to support proposals that earlier generations of Republicans had overwhelmingly rejected.
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Goodin, Robert E., and Kai Spiekermann. Limitations. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198823452.003.0004.

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This chapter analyses what happens when the assumptions of the Condorcet Jury Theorem are not met. The first concern is about the existence of truths to be tracked in the political realm. We argue that there are many factual claims in politics that go beyond mere value judgements. The second concern is about agendas on which the correct answer is missing or there are multiple equally correct answers, a problem that cannot be fully dismissed but is limited in scope. The third concern is about strategic voting. We argue that these worries have been exaggerated, as strategic considerations are typically outweighed by expressive motives. We counter the fourth concern, that voters are often incompetent, on grounds that a systematic tendency to be wrong is unstable. Finally, the most serious concern, that votes are typically dependent, is investigated in detail, while solutions to this problem are offered in the next chapter.
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Book chapters on the topic "Voting Correctly"

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Merolla, Jennifer L., Laura B. Stephenson, and Elizabeth J. Zechmeister. "Deciding Correctly: Variance in the Effective Use of Party Cues." In Voting Experiments, 19–42. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40573-5_2.

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Wang, Xunhua, Ralph Grove, and M. Hossain Heydari. "Secure Electronic Voting with Cryptography." In Applied Cryptography for Cyber Security and Defense, 271–88. IGI Global, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-783-1.ch012.

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In recent years, computer and network-based voting technologies have been gradually adopted for various elections. However, due to the fragile nature of electronic ballots and voting software, computer voting has posed serious security challenges. This chapter studies the security of computer voting and focuses on a cryptographic solution based on mix-nets. Like traditional voting systems, mix-net-based computer voting provides voter privacy and prevents vote selling/buying and vote coercion. Unlike traditional voting systems, mix-net-based computer voting has several additional advantages: 1) it offers vote verifiability, allowing individual voters to directly verify whether their votes have been counted and counted correctly; 2) it allows voters to check the behavior of potentially malicious computer voting machines and thus does not require voters to blindly trust computer voting machines. In this chapter, we give the full details of the building blocks for the mix-net-based computer voting scheme, including semantically secure encryption, threshold decryption, mix-net, and robust mix-net. Future research directions on secure electronic voting are also discussed.
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"11. Assessing the Quality of European Democracy: Are Voters Voting Correctly?" In How Democracy Works, 199–220. Amsterdam University Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9789048513369-012.

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Bruschi, Danilo, Andrea Lanzi, and Igor Naiq Fovino. "A Protocol for Anonymous and Accurate E-Polling." In Secure E-Government Web Services, 180–98. IGI Global, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59904-138-4.ch011.

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E-polling systems are a fundamental component of any E-democracy system as they represent the most appropriate tool for fostering citizens participation to public debates. Contrarily to e-voting protocols, they are characterized by less stringent security requirements and they can also tolerate errors affecting a small percentage of votes, without compromising of the final result. Thus, their realization can be effectively pursued supporting the diffusion of e-democracy. In this paper we propose a simple protocol for an accurate and anonymous e-polling system. Such a protocol satisfies, among the others, the following properties: a vote cannot be altered, duplicated, or removed without being detected, votes remain anonymous. Moreover voters will be able to measure the level of trust of the process by verifying that their own votes have been correctly counted.
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Burt, Robert A. "Race Relations: Between Emancipation and Subjugation." In Justice and Empathy, edited by Frank Iacobucci. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300224269.003.0010.

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This chapter discusses race relations as the paradigmatic judicial effort to protect vulnerable groups under the commitment made in Footnote Four. After the Supreme Court correctly held in Brown I that racial segregation in schools was unconstitutional, and in Brown II wisely paused to enlist the assistance of district courts, the federal Congress, the executive, and others, the Court then failed to continue this approach after the passing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the Fair Housing law in 1968 by requiring past intentionally imposed race discrimination in public schools to obtain judicial relief. The chapter then offers suggestions on what the Court could have done—an approach of less intervention by the Court imposing its views of equality on the parties and more promotion of deliberation among the parties to achieve democratic equality.
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"Appendix C Details of Correct-Voting Analyses." In Persuasive Peers, 307–16. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780691205793-017.

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Gangabaatar, Dashbalbar. "Electoral Reform and the Electronic Voting System." In Advances in Electronic Government, Digital Divide, and Regional Development, 182–204. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-3152-5.ch008.

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Mongolia introduced a new electronic voting system for the first time for the 2012 parliamentary election. E-voting empowers citizens by making voting simpler and providing better opportunities for certain groups of citizens to participate in the election process. The electoral reform was one of the major steps the parliament carried out in order to restore public trust lost in the violent protests against the 2008 parliamentary election results. A free, transparent, and fair electoral system was important to correct the fraud in the old election system. This chapter examines the effectiveness of the mixed system of election, the electronic voting system, the constitutionality of the electoral systems, and other changes to the electoral system in Mongolia.
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Haenni, Rolf, and Reto E. Koenig. "Voting over the Internet on an Insecure Platform." In Advances in Electronic Government, Digital Divide, and Regional Development, 62–75. IGI Global, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-5820-2.ch003.

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Voters using their insecure personal devices for casting votes cause a critical but still largely unsolved problem in Internet voting. This chapter addresses this problem by introducing a trusted voting device, which can be used in combination with various cryptographic voting protocols. It's an answer to one of the main assumptions, on which these protocols are based, namely that voters can reliably perform various cryptographic computations. We suggest that all critical cryptographic computations are performed on the voting device, but we restrict its user interface to the simple task of allowing voters to confirm their votes before casting the ballot. The ballots themselves are prepared beforehand on the voter's insecure platform using its rich user interface. To provide privacy even in the presence of strong malware, the voting device receives its information from the voter's insecure platform in form of matrix barcodes. The unidirectionality of such an optical communication channel disallows the insecure platform to learn the voter's actual choice. To verify the correct functioning of the voting device, it can be challenged with test ballots that are indistinguishable from real ones.
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Christian, Ben. "Correct Voting at the 2013 German Federal Election: An Analysis of Normatively Desirable Campaign Effects." In Parties and Voters at the 2013 German Federal Election, 170–86. Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315123899-9.

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"Chapter 4 Policy versus Personality: Correct Voting and the Outcome of the 2014 Toronto Mayoral Election." In Electing a Mega-Mayor, 66–84. University of Toronto Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781487509651-007.

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Conference papers on the topic "Voting Correctly"

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Masuoka, Takashi, Yasuyuki Takatsu, and Itsuhei Kohri. "Thermal Sensation Under Unsteady Thermal Environments." In ASME 2002 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2002-39630.

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As the absolute level of thermal sensation is vague for human beings, one cannot correctly select the absolute level of the multi-point thermal sensation scale with any kinds of precise classification. To achieve a breakthrough in such a situation, we propose a new voting method based on the relative change of thermal sensation, and investigate the thermal sensation under the unsteady thermal environments. It is shown that the new voting method is essential for the evaluation of thermal sensation under the unsteady environments and brings some aspects of the thermal sensation under the unsteady environments. Furthermore, we discuss the standardization of the thermal sensation in detail, and propose a new parameter for the standardization.
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Ceschini, Giuseppe Fabio, Nicolò Gatta, Mauro Venturini, Thomas Hubauer, and Alin Murarasu. "A Comprehensive Approach for Detection, Classification and Integrated Diagnostics of Gas Turbine Sensors (DCIDS)." In ASME Turbo Expo 2017: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2017-63411.

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Anomaly detection in sensor time series is a crucial aspect for raw data cleaning in gas turbine industry. In addition to efficiency, a successful methodology for industrial applications should be also characterized by ease of implementation and operation. To this purpose, a comprehensive and straightforward approach for Detection, Classification and Integrated Diagnostics of Gas Turbine Sensors (named DCIDS) is proposed in this paper. The tool consists of two main algorithms, i.e. the Anomaly Detection Algorithm (ADA) and the Anomaly Classification Algorithm (ACA). The ADA identifies anomalies according to three different levels of filtering based on gross physics threshold application, inter-sensor statistical analysis (sensor voting) and single-sensor statistical analysis. Anomalies in the time series are identified by the ADA, together with their characteristics, which are analyzed by the ACA to perform their classification. Fault classes discriminate among anomalies according to their time correlation, magnitude and number of sensors in which an anomaly is contemporarily identified. Results of anomaly identification and classification can subsequently be used for sensor diagnostic purposes. The performance of the tool is assessed in this paper by analyzing two temperature time series with redundant sensors taken on a Siemens gas turbine in operation. The results show that the DICDS is able to identify and classify different types of anomalies. In particular, in the first dataset, two severely incoherent sensors are identified and their anomalies are correctly classified. In the second dataset, the DCIDS tool proves to be capable of identifying and classifying clustered spikes of different magnitudes.
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Boneh, Dan, and Philippe Golle. "Almost entirely correct mixing with applications to voting." In the 9th ACM conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/586110.586121.

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Hosseini, Hadi, Debmalya Mandal, Nisarg Shah, and Kevin Shi. "Surprisingly Popular Voting Recovers Rankings, Surprisingly!" In Thirtieth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-21}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2021/35.

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The wisdom of the crowd has long become the de facto approach for eliciting information from individuals or experts in order to predict the ground truth. However, classical democratic approaches for aggregating individual \emph{votes} only work when the opinion of the majority of the crowd is relatively accurate. A clever recent approach, \emph{surprisingly popular voting}, elicits additional information from the individuals, namely their \emph{prediction} of other individuals' votes, and provably recovers the ground truth even when experts are in minority. This approach works well when the goal is to pick the correct option from a small list, but when the goal is to recover a true ranking of the alternatives, a direct application of the approach requires eliciting too much information. We explore practical techniques for extending the surprisingly popular algorithm to ranked voting by partial votes and predictions and designing robust aggregation rules. We experimentally demonstrate that even a little prediction information helps surprisingly popular voting outperform classical approaches.
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Kawase, Yasushi, Yuko Kuroki, and Atsushi Miyauchi. "Graph Mining Meets Crowdsourcing: Extracting Experts for Answer Aggregation." In Twenty-Eighth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence {IJCAI-19}. California: International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.24963/ijcai.2019/177.

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Aggregating responses from crowd workers is a fundamental task in the process of crowdsourcing. In cases where a few experts are overwhelmed by a large number of non-experts, most answer aggregation algorithms such as the majority voting fail to identify the correct answers. Therefore, it is crucial to extract reliable experts from the crowd workers. In this study, we introduce the notion of "expert core", which is a set of workers that is very unlikely to contain a non-expert. We design a graph-mining-based efficient algorithm that exactly computes the expert core. To answer the aggregation task, we propose two types of algorithms. The first one incorporates the expert core into existing answer aggregation algorithms such as the majority voting, whereas the second one utilizes information provided by the expert core extraction algorithm pertaining to the reliability of workers. We then give a theoretical justification for the first type of algorithm. Computational experiments using synthetic and real-world datasets demonstrate that our proposed answer aggregation algorithms outperform state-of-the-art algorithms.
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