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The ANES Bibliography - O |
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Both authors and co-authors are indexed. Please note all entries are listed alphabetically by main author only. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZAbramson, Paul R., and Jr. Charles W. Ostrom. 1991. Macropartisanship: An Empirical Reassessment. American Political Science Review 85: 181-92. Abramson, Paul R., and Jr. Charles W. Ostrom. 1992. Question Wording and Macropartisanship Response. American Political Science Review 86: 475-86. Abramson, Paul R., and Jr. Charles W. Ostrom. 1994. Question Wording and Partisanship: Change and Continuity in Party Loyalties During the 1992 Election Campaign . Public Opinion Quarterly 58, no. 1: 21-48. Bardes, Barbara A., and Robert W. Oldendick. 2003. "Public Opinion, Measuring the Public Mind."Princeton, NJ: Recording for the Blind and Dyslexic. Bennett, Stephen Earl, Robert W. Oldendick, Alfred J. Tuchfarber, and George F. Bishop. 1979. Education and Mass Belief Systems: An Extension and Some New Questions. Political Behavior 1, no. 1: 53-72. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, and Alfred J. Tuchfarber. 1980. Experiments in Filtering Political Opinions. Political Behavior 2, no. 4: 339-69. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, and Alfred J. Tuchfarber. 1980. Experiments in Using Survey Filter Questions with American Public Affairs Issues. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, and Alfred J. Tuchfarber. 1984. Interest in Political Campaigns: The Influence of Question Order and Electoral Context. Political Behavior 6, no. 2: 159-69. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, and Alfred J. Tuchfarber. 1982. Political Information Processing: Question Order and Context Effects. Political Behavior 4: 177-200. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, and Alfred J. Tuchfarber. 1983. Voting, Memory, and Interest in Following Political Campaigns. Presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, and Alfred J. Tuchfarber. 1982. What Must My Interest in Politics Be If I Just Told You "I Don't Know?". Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, and Alfred J. Tuchfarber. 1984. What Must My Interest in Politics Be If I Just Told You "I Don't Know"? The Public Opinion Quarterly 48, no. 2: 510-19. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, Alfred J. Tuchfarber, and Stephen Earl Bennett. 1978. The Changing Structure of Mass Belief Systems: Fact or Artifact? Journal of Politics 40, no. 3: 781-87. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, Alfred J. Tuchfarber, and Stephen Earl Bennett. 1978. Opinion Filtering and Political Attitude Structure. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Bishop, George F., Robert W. Oldendick, Alfred J. Tuchfarber, and Stephen Earl Bennett. 1980. Pseudo-Opinions on Public Affairs. The Public Opinion Quarterly 44, no. 2: 198-209. Bishop, George F., Alfred J. Tuchfarber, and Robert W. Oldendick. 1978. Change in the Structure of American Political Attitudes: The Nagging Question of Question Wording. American Journal of Political Science 22, no. 2: 250-67. Bishop, George F., Alfred J. Tuchfarber, and Robert W. Oldendick. 1984. Opinions on Fictitious Public Affairs Issues: Unwillingness To Admit Ignorance or Conformity to Situational Demands? Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Brady, Henry E., and Richard Johnston. 1987. What's the Primary Message: Horse Race or Issue Journalism. In Media and Momentum: The New Hampshire Primary and Nomination Politics. Gary R. Orren, and Nelson W. PolsbyChatham: Chatham House Publishers. Brady, Henry E., and Gary R. Orren. 1992. Polling Pitfalls: Sources of Error in Public Opinion Surveys. In Media Polls in American Politics. Thomas E. Mann, and Gary R. OrrenWashington, DC: Brookings. Cover, Albert D., and David R. Mayhew. 1981. Congressional Dynamics and the Decline of Competitive Congressional Elections. in Congress Reconsidered, 2nd edition. Lawrence C. Dodd, and Bruce I. OppenheimerWashington: Congressional Quarterly Press: 62-82. Dennis, Jack, and Diana Owen. 1994. Anti-Partyism and Support for Perot, 1992-93. Presented at the Workshop on Anti-Party Sentiment, European Consortium for Political Research Joint Sessions of Workshops. Dennis, Jack, and Diana Owen. 1997. The Partisanship Puzzle: Identification and Attitudes of Generation X. in After the Boom. eds. Stephen C. Craig, and Stephen Earl BennettNew York, NY: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc. Dolan, Kathleen A. 2003. Electoral Context, Issues, and Voting for Women in the 1990s. in Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling. ed. Karen O'Connor, 21-36. New York, NY: Haworth Press. Erikson, Robert S., and Gerald C. Wright. 1997. Voters, Candidates, and Issues in Congressional Elections. Congress Reconsidered. 6th ition ed., Editors Lawrence C. Dodd, and Bruce I. Oppenheimer, 132-61. Washington D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Press. Frohlich, Norman, Joe A. Oppenheimer, Jeffrey A. Smith, and Oran R. Young. 1978. A Test of Downsian Voter Rationality: 1964 Presidential Voting. American Political Science Review 72, no. 1: 178-97. Graham, Jr. Cole Blease, Robert W. Oldendick, and Michael W. Link. 1996. Across the Great Divide: Examining Black-White Differences in Political Attitudes. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for Public Opinion Research. Grofman, Bernard N., Guillermo Owen, and Christian Collet. 1999. Rethinking the partisan effects of higher turnout: So what's the question? Public Choice 99: 357-76. Hinich, Melvin J., L. Cahoon, and P. C. Ordeshook. 1978. A Statistical Multidimensional Scaling Method Based on the Spatial Theory of Voting. in Graphical Representation of Multivariate Data. editor R. C. Wang, 243-78. New York: Academic Press. Hoover, Michael, and Susan Orr. 2005. Youth Political Engagement: Why Rock the Vote Hits the Wrong Note. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. Huckfeldt, Robert, Jeanette L. Morehouse, and Tracy Osborn. 2004. Disagreement, Ambivalence, and Engagement: The Political Consequences of Heterogeneous Networks. Political Psychology 25, no. 1: 65. Javers, Eamon, Daniel Lathrop, Liz Oliner, Robert Schlesinger, and David R. Segal. 15 July 1998. CYNICAL? US? The Hill, sec. OPEN SECRETS OF THE HILL , p. 14. Keith, Bruce E., David B. Magleby, Candice J. Nelson, Elizabeth Orr, Mark C. Westlye, and Raymond E. Wolfinger, Eds. 1992. The Myth of the Independent Voter. Berkeley/Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press. Keith, Bruce E., David B. Magleby, Cice J. Nelson, Elizabeth Orr, Mark C. Westlye, and Raymond E. Wolfinger. 1983. Further Evidence on the Partisan Affinities of Independent 'Leaners'. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. Keith, Bruce E., David B. Magleby, Cice J. Nelson, Elizabeth Orr, Mark C. Westlye, and Raymond E. Wolfinger. 1977. The Myth of the Independent Voter. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. Keith, Bruce E., David B. Magleby, Cice J. Nelson, Elizabeth Orr, Mark C. Westlye, and Raymond E. Wolfinger. 1986. The Partisan Affinities of Independent 'Leaners'. British Journal of Political Science 16, no. 2: 155-85. King, Michael R., and Robert E. O'Connor. 1981. The Contribution of the ISR Voting Studies: Review and Critique. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. Kropf, Martha E., and John A. Boiney. 2003. The Electoral Glass Ceiling? Gender, Viability, and the News in U.S. Senate Campaigns. in Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling. ed. Karen O'Connor, 79-104. New York, NY: Haworth Press. Kuklinski, James H., Ellen Riggle, Victor Ottati, Norbert Schwarz, and Jr. Robert S. Wyer. 1991. The Cognitive and Affective Bases of Political Tolerance Judgments . American Journal of Political Science 35, no. 1: 1-27. Lengle, James I., Diana Owen, and Molly W. Sonner. 1996. Divisive Primaries and Electoral Turnoff. Presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association. Levy, Dena, Charles Tien, and Rachelle Aved. 2003. Do Differences Matter? Women Members of Congress and the Hyde Amendment. in Women and Congress: Running, Winning, and Ruling. ed. Karen O'Connor, 105-25. New York, NY: Haworth Press. Link, Michael W., and Robert W. Oldendick. 1996. Social Construction and White Attitudes toward Equal Opportunity and Multiculturalism. Journal of Politics 58: 149-68. Mainieri, Tina, Elaine G. Barnett, Trisha R. Valdero, John B. Unipan, and Stuart Oskamp. 1997. Green buying: The influence of environmental concern on consumer behavior . Journal of Social Psychology 137, no. 2: 189-204. O'Beirne, Kate. 2004. Don't Know Much about Politics. National Review 56, no. 21: 26-27. O'Brien, Robert M. 1998. Correcting measures of relationship between aggregate-level variables for both unreliability and correlated errors: An empirical example. Social Science Research 27, no. 2: 218-34. O'Brien, Robert M. 1981. Reducing Grouping Distortion in Rank Category Variables. American Journal of Political Science 25, no. 3: 605-16. O'Connor, Karen. 1996. No Neutral Ground?: Abortion Politics in an Age of Absolutes. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. O'Gorman, Hubert J. 1975. Pluralistic Ignorance and White Estimates of White Support for Racial Segregation. Public Opinion Quarterly 39, no. 3: 313-30. O'Gorman, Hubert J. 1979. White and Black Perceptions of Racial Values. Public Opinion Quarterly 43, no. 1: 48-59. O'Gorman, Hubert J., and Stephen L. Garry. 1976-1977. Pluralistic Ignorance: A Replication and Extension. Public Opinion Quarterly 40, no. 4: 449-58. O'Keefe, Eric, and Aaron Steelman. 17 August 1997. Why incumbents yearn for reforms. The Washington Times, sec. Commentary, p. B4. O'Regan, Valerie R., Stephen J. Stambough, and Gary R. Thorson. 2005. Understanding the Changing Dynamics of the Gender Gap in American Presidential Elections, 1952-2004. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Assocation. O'Rourke, Lawrence M. 14 August 2000. It's Lights, Cameras, Action: Democrats in Los Angeles Take the Political Stage for the Next Four Days. Star Tribune, sec. NEWS, p. 1A. O'Toole, Kristine M. 2003. "Media facilitation of American political effectiveness: The construction of issue-based vote choice." Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Louville. Odyssey . 2000. Interview with Dick Simpson, Professor of Political Science, University of Illinois, Jeff Manza, Associate Professor of Sociology, Northwestern, Paul Green, Director, Policy Studies Program Roosevelt University, and Bob Bruno, Teacher, Industrial Relations University of Chicago. Video Monitoring Services of America. WBEZ-FM . Oliver, Eric J. 2001. Democracy in Suburbia. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Oliver, Eric J., and Raymond E. Wolfinger. 1999. Jury Aversion and Voter Registration. The American Political Science Review 93, no. 1: 147-52. Oliver, Eric J., and Raymond E. Wolfinger. 1992. Jury Duty as a Deterrent to Voter Registration, NES Pilot Study Report, No. nes002297. Ondercin, Heather. 2005. Donna Reed and the Partisan Gender Gap: How Changes in Aggregate Social Identities have Caused Changes in the Partisan Gender Gap. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Assocation. Ono, Keiko. 2005. Courting the faithful? Evidence of selective mobilization from the 2004 election. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Ono, Keiko. 2004. Polarized Politics and Midterm Elections: An Electoral Connection. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association. Ono, Keiko. 2004. Polarized Politics and Voter. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Ono, Keiko. 2003. The Voter Turnout and Polarization of US Congress: A Causal Relationship? Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association . Opinion Roundup . 1988. The 1988 Election Results. Public Opinion 5: 21-40. Opinion Roundup . 1988. An Ambivalent Public. Public Opinion 13: 21-40. Opinion Roundup . 1988. Election Preview: Setting the Stage. Public Opinion 2: 21-40. Oppenheimer, Bruce I. 1996. Memo to Congressional Election Conference Attendees. Presented at the NES Research and Development Conference on Congressional Elections. Oppenheimer, Bruce I. 1994. The Representational Experience: The Effect of State Population on Senator-Constituency Linkages. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. Oppenheimer, Bruce I. 1996. The Representational Experience: The Effect of State Population on Senator-Constituency Linkages. American Journal of Political Science 40, no. 4: 1280-99. Ornstein, Norman J. 1998. Doing Congress's Dirty Work. Georgetown Law Journal 86: 2179. Ornstein, Norman J., Thomas E. Mann, and Michael J. Malbin. 2002. Vital Statistics on Congress 2001-2002. Washington, D.C.: American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research. Orren, Gary R. 1978. Candidate Style and Voter Alignment in 1976. in Emerging Coalitions in American Politics. ed. Seymour Martin LipsetSan Francisco, CA: Institute for Contemporary Studies. Orren, Gary R. 1997. Fall from Grace: The Public's Loss of Faith in Government. in Why People Don't Trust Government. eds. Jr. Joseph S. Nye, Philip D. Zelikow, and David C. KingCambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Orren, Gary R. 1987. The Linkage of Policy to Participation. In Presidential Selection. Alexander Heard, and Michael NelsonDurham: Duke University Press. Ostrom, Jr. Charles W., and Dennis M. Simon. 1983. The Importance of Presidential Popularity in the Perpetual Election: A Reexamination and Reorientation of the Conventional Wisdom. Presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Owen, Diana, and Jack Dennis. 2001. Trust in Federal Government: The Phenomenon and Its Antecedents. in What it is about Goverment that Americans Dislike? eds. John R. Hibbing, and Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, 209-26. Cambridge University Press. Owen, Diana, Jack Dennis, and Casey A. Klofstad. 2001. Public Support for the Party System in the United States. in The State of Democracy in America. ed. William J. Crotty, 47-73. Washington D.C.: Georgetown University Press. Owens, John E. 29 January 1996. Gingrich's House Has Something in Common With British Parliament. Roll Call, sec. Guest Observer. Oxford Analytica. 2004. United States: Political Polarisation a Myth. Oxford Research. Oyamot, Clifton M. Jr. 2006. Can Values Moderate the Attitudes of Right-Wing Authoritarians? Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 32, no. 4: 486-500. Pan, Zhongdang, Ronald E. Ostman, Patricia Moy, and Paula Reynolds. 1994. News Media Exposure and Its Learning Effects During the Persian Gulf War. Journalism Quarterly 71: 7-19. Parker, Glenn R. 1989. Members of Congress and their Constituents: The Home Style Connection. in Congress Reconsidered. eds. Lawrence C. Dodd, and Bruce I. OppenheimerWashington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Press. Smith, Jr. Charles Eldon, Robert D. Brown, John M. Bruce, and L. Marvin Overby. 1999. Party Balancing and Voting for Congress in the 1996 National Election. American Journal of Political Science 43, no. 3: 737-64. Soule, Sarah A., and Susan Olzak. 2004. When Do Movements Matter? The Politics of Contingency and the Equal Rights Amendment. American Sociological Review 69, no. 4: 473-97. Susan A., Richard L. Fox, Sonia R. Garcia, Donald E. Mason, Audrey E. O'Connell, Eric R. A. N. Smith, and Dale Wheatley. 1990. The Spiral of Silence and Participation in American Elections. Presented at the annual meeting of the Western Political Science Association. Verba, Sidney, and Gary R. Orren. 1985. Equality in America: The View from the Top. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Warber, Adam L., and Laura R. Olson. 2005. Commander and Priest: Religious Leadership in the Modern White House. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association. White, Stephen, Ian McAllister, and Sarah Oates. 2002. Was It Russian Public Television That Won It? Harvard International Journal of Press-Politics 7, no. 2: 17-33.
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