Fruit Of The Loin
Zeitgeist Spontaneity Recommend Follow Mobile Ask Fan Mail
theatlantic:

canisfamiliaris:

The Power of Nouns to Increases Voter Turnout
Countries around the world have tried many tactics to encourage people to vote, from easier access to polling stations to mandatory registration. But Christopher Bryan from Stanford University has found a startlingly simple weapon for increasing voter turnout — the noun. Through a simple linguistic tweak, he managed to increase the proportion of voters in two groups of Americans by at least 10 percentage points.
During the 2008 presidential election, Bryan recruited 34 Californians who were eligible to vote but hadn’t registered yet. They all completed a survey which, among other questions, asked them either “How important is it to you to be a voter in the upcoming election?” or “How important is it to you to vote in the upcoming election?”
It was the tiniest of tweaks — the noun “voter” versus the verb “vote” — but it was a significant one. Around 88% of the noun group said they were very or extremely interested in registering to vote, compared to just 56% of the verb group.

Fascinating!

Fascinating indeed! Love this stuff.

theatlantic:

canisfamiliaris:

The Power of Nouns to Increases Voter Turnout

Countries around the world have tried many tactics to encourage people to vote, from easier access to polling stations to mandatory registration. But Christopher Bryan from Stanford University has found a startlingly simple weapon for increasing voter turnout — the noun. Through a simple linguistic tweak, he managed to increase the proportion of voters in two groups of Americans by at least 10 percentage points.

During the 2008 presidential election, Bryan recruited 34 Californians who were eligible to vote but hadn’t registered yet. They all completed a survey which, among other questions, asked them either “How important is it to you to be a voter in the upcoming election?” or “How important is it to you to vote in the upcoming election?”

It was the tiniest of tweaks — the noun “voter” versus the verb “vote” — but it was a significant one. Around 88% of the noun group said they were very or extremely interested in registering to vote, compared to just 56% of the verb group.

Fascinating!

Fascinating indeed! Love this stuff.

  1. opendaylight a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic
  2. ub14 a reblogué ce billet depuis abbyjean et a ajouté :
    Interesting. Somewhat relatedly, during the exam, the proctors issued all kinds of threats to people who still had their...
  3. silas216 a reblogué ce billet depuis abbyjean
  4. valentine-wiggin a reblogué ce billet depuis abbyjean
  5. philosophicallust a reblogué ce billet depuis thelolakate
  6. thelolakate a reblogué ce billet depuis abbyjean
  7. gleeksfalllikedominoes a reblogué ce billet depuis abbyjean
  8. abbyjean a reblogué ce billet depuis canisfamiliaris
  9. mssaffronjones a reblogué ce billet depuis reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  10. relivethesplendor a reblogué ce billet depuis reagan-was-a-horrible-president
  11. reagan-was-a-horrible-president a reblogué ce billet depuis thedustatdawn
  12. ubernutella a reblogué ce billet depuis athinkinganimal
  13. dontstopmemeow a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic
  14. houseoforange a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic et a ajouté :
    Fascinating indeed! Love this stuff.
  15. athinkinganimal a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic
  16. thedustatdawn a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic
  17. hiqus a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic
  18. thefortnightly a reblogué ce billet depuis canisfamiliaris
  19. tcg a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic
  20. straymessages a reblogué ce billet depuis theatlantic et a ajouté :
    and they said passive verbs are not powerful!! vindication!
Powered by Tumblr.