Publications
Title | Author(s) | Discipline | Publication | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Federal Spending Paradox: Economic Self-Interest and Symbolic Racism in Contemporary Fiscal Politics |
Katherine Krimmel and Kelly Rader |
Political Science | American Politics Research | 2017 |
What Have We Learned about Gender from Candidate Choice Experiments? A Meta-Analysis of Sixty-Seven Factorial Survey Experiments |
Susanne Schwarz and Alexander Coppock |
Political Science | Journal of Politics | 2022 |
Partisanship and the Allocation of Federal Spending: Do Same-Party Legislators or Voters Benefit from Shared Party Affiliation with the President and House Majority? |
Adam M. Dynes and Gregory A. Huber |
Political Science | American Political Science Review | 2015 |
The Politicization of Evidence-Based Medicine: The Limits of Pragmatic Problem Solving in an Era of Polarization |
Alan S. Gerber and Eric M. Patashnik |
Political Science | California Journal of Politics and Policy | 2011 |
Do Phone Calls Increase Voter Turnout? An Update |
Alan S. Gerber, Donald P. Green |
Political Science | Annals of the American Academy for Political and Social Science | 2005 |
Perceptions of Program Abuse and Support for Social Insurance |
Scott E. Bokemper, Albert H. Fang, and Gregory A. Huber |
Political Science | American Politics Research | 2020 |
Price and Party: The Importance of Partisanship and Cost in American Climate Public Opinion |
Eric G. Scheuch |
Political Science | PLOS Climate | 2024 |
Does Incarceration Reduce Voting? Evidence about the Political Consequences of Spending Time in Prison |
Alan S. Gerber, Gregory A. Huber, Marc Meredith, Daniel R. Biggers, and David J. Hendry |
Political Science | Journal of Politics | 2017 |
How Politicians Discount the Opinions of Constituents with Whom They Disagree |
Daniel M. Butler and Adam M. Dynes |
Political Science | American Journal of Political Science | 2015 |
Do Congressional Candidates Have Reverse Coattails? Evidence from a Regression Discontinuity Design |
David E. Broockman |
Political Science | Political Analysis | 2009 |
Targeted Campaign Appeals and the Value of Ambiguity |
Eitan D. Hersh and Brian F. Schaffner |
Political Science | Journal of Politics | 2013 |
Response to Franz, Freedman, Goldstein, and Ridout |
Jonathan S. Krasno, Donald P. Green |
Political Science | Journal of Politics | 2008 |
Adaptive Experimental Design: Prospects and Applications in Political Science |
Molly Offer‐Westort, Alexander Coppock, Donald P. Green |
Political Science | American Journal of Political Science | 2021 |
It's Largely a Rigged System: Voter Confidence and the Winner Effect in 2016 |
Betsy Sinclair, Steven S. Smith, and Patrick D. Tucker |
Political Science | Political Research Quarterly | 2018 |
Policy Misperceptions and Support for Gun Control Legislation |
Peter M. Aronow and Benjamin T. Miller |
Political Science | The Lancet | 2016 |
Affect, Social Pressure and Prosocial Motivation: Field Experimental Evidence of the Mobilizing Effects of Pride, Shame and Publicizing Voting Behavior |
Costas Panagopulos |
Political Science | Political Behavior | 2010 |
Explaining Support for Combatants during Wartime: A Survey Experiment in Afghanistan |
Jason Lyall, Graeme Blair, Kosuke Imai |
Political Science | American Political Science Review | 2013 |
Corruption and Inequality at the Crossroad: A Multi-Method Study of Bribery and Discrimination in Latin America |
Brian J. Fried, Paul Lagunes, Atheendar Venkataramani |
Political Science | Latin American Research Review | 2010 |
The Generalizability of Online Experiments Conducted During the COVID-19 Pandemic |
Kyle Peyton, Gregory A. Huber, and Alexander Coppock |
Political Science | Journal of Experimental Political Science | 2021 |
Avoiding Post-Treatment Bias in Audit Experiments |
Alexander E. Coppock |
Political Science | Journal of Experimental Political Science | 2019 |