Dartmouth Events

Quantitative Social Science colloquium 2022-23

Join us on November 7 for a QSS colloquium with Professor Michael Herron of the Program in Quantitative Social Science who will be talking about theories of vote manipulation.

Monday, November 7, 2022
12:15pm – 1:15pm
Class of 1930 Room, Rockefeller Center
Intended Audience(s): Faculty, Postdoc
Categories: Lectures & Seminars

Title: Evaluating a New Generation of Expansive Claims about Vote Manipulation

Speaker: Michael Herron, Professor of Quantitative Social Science, Dartmouth College

Abstract: In the wake of Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election, a cottage industry of conspiracy theorists has advanced ever more expansive claims of vote manipulation, going so far as to allege that all American elections are subject to manipulation—even in largely Republican states. In the extreme, these conspiracy theorists argue that candidates in U.S. elections are selected rather than elected. We evaluate two recent sets of claims about vote manipulation that allege algorithms are used to shift votes towards preferred candidates. Even though these claims are distinct, they fail for similar reasons. For example, both sets of claims assert that “unnaturally” accurate predictions of election results are evidence of vote manipulation, an allegation that is a result of predicting a variable with itself. Furthermore, both claims make easily refuted errors in logic and data analysis and in addition misrepresent historical election patterns. While recent claims about vote manipulation are prima facie outlandish, their effects on policy and the public are real. Refuting false claims about vote manipulation is essential to ensuring the continued functioning of U.S. elections and American democracy more generally.

For more information, contact:
Andrew Coombs

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.