No Evidence on Directional Vs. Proximity Voting
Jeffrey Lewis, Gary King. 1999.
"No Evidence on Directional Vs. Proximity Voting".
Political Analysis, 8, Pp. 21–33.

Abstract
The directional and proximity models offer dramatically different theories for how voters make decisions and fundamentally divergent views of the supposed microfoundations on which vast bodies of literature in theoretical rational choice and empirical political behavior have been built. We demonstrate here that the empirical tests in the large and growing body of literature on this subject amount to theoretical debates about which statistical assumption is right. The key statistical assumptions have not been empirically tested and, indeed, turn out to be effectively untestable with exiting methods and data. Unfortunately, these assumptions are also crucial since changing them leads to different conclusions about voter processes.
See Also
- [Dataset] Replication data (Harvard Dataverse)
- [Paper] Book Review of `Forecasting Presidential Elections' (1985)
- [Paper] Did Illegal Overseas Absentee Ballots Decide the 2000 U.S. Presidential Election? (2004)
- [Paper] Do Nonpartisan Programmatic Policies Have Partisan Electoral Effects? Evidence from Two Large Scale Experiments (2020)
- [Paper] Estimating Partisan Bias of the Electoral College Under Proposed Changes in Elector Apportionment (2012)
- [Paper] Estimating the Probability of Events That Have Never Occurred: When Is Your Vote Decisive? (1998)
- [Paper] On Party Platforms, Mandates, and Government Spending (1993)
- [Paper] Ordinary Economic Voting Behavior in the Extraordinary Election of Adolf Hitler (2008)