Primaries Correctly Predicted By NZ Schoolgirls
Sent on behalf of Dr Kesten Green by Terry Dunleavy
Presidential Primaries Votes Were Correctly Predicted in August 2007
- by New Zealand School Girls
Snap judgments of New Zealand high school girls helped researchers at the University of Pennsylvania to predict that John McCain would be the Republican nominee for the US presidency later this year. McCain came from nowhere to defeat once favoured Republicans Rudy Giuliani and Fred Thompson. This was no surprise to a team of researchers based at the Wharton Business School. They predicted this outcome in August 2007 by relying on the snap judgments of New Zealand schoolgirls.
Professor Scott Armstrong
of the Wharton School and his colleagues Professors Randall
Jones in the US, Malcolm Wright in Australia, and Dr Kesten
Green in New Zealand had their interest piqued by the work
of Princeton Professor Alexander Todorov. Todorov found that
snap judgments of competence, based on a quick look at
pictures of candidates’ faces, had done a good job of
predicting the winners of congressional and senate races.
The Wharton team extended this research to US presidential
primaries.
From May through mid-August 2007 the
researchers obtained ratings of facial competence of 24
potential contenders for the major party nominations for
president in 2008. The researchers provided no other
information to the raters than color portrait photographs of
the candidates. Because the team wanted ratings made in the
absence of any other knowledge about the candidates, they
relied heavily on university students in Australia and New
Zealand and high school girls in New Zealand, who were
unlikely to be familiar with the candidates. Even so, some
of the students recognized Clinton and Obama, in particular,
and those ratings were excluded. In the end, the researchers
obtained between 139 and 348 ratings for each
contender.
In its 2 November 2007 issue, Science
published a report on this study when polls had McCain at
15%, still trailing Giuliani and Thompson for the Republican
nomination, and support for Democrat Obama was in the low
20s. The researchers hypothesized that the candidates'
standing in the polls would move closer to their facial
competence rankings as more voters became familiar with
their appearance. And so it happened.
Warning:
while it may be efficient for people to choose a president
on the basis of snap judgments, to do so may not provide the
best leadership. There is no relationship between looking
competent and the real thing. The researchers suggest that
political parties should increase their chances by putting
forward competent-looking candidates, but that voters should
make decisions after becoming familiar with the
candidates’ policies.
For more information
contact Kesten Green at kesten@forprin.com. Full text of the
paper is provided at
http://PoliticalForecasting.com.
ends