Study Finds US Elections Trend Toward Ties Above $1.8M Spending Threshold
6 Articles
6 Articles
A physics explanation of why US elections keep ending 50:50 – and why more spending won't change that
A physics-inspired model calibrated on 40 years of US congressional data pinpoints a spending threshold of roughly 1.8 million USD at which campaigns stop influencing who wins and start fueling polarization instead.
A physics explanation shows why US elections keep ending 50:50—and why more spending won't change that
A physics-inspired model calibrated on 40 years of US congressional data pinpoints a spending threshold of roughly 1.8 million USD at which campaigns stop influencing who wins and start fueling polarization instead.
Why US Elections Often Tilt 50:50 – and Why More Campaign Spending
Political campaigns in the United States have long been subjects of intense study, with many efforts made to understand what drives the razor-thin margins that often decide elections. A groundbreaking new study, emerging from the Complexity Science Hub (CSH) in Vienna, leverages concepts from statistical physics to shed light on these near-dead heats and the growing polarization surrounding them. Published in the prestigious journal Physical Rev…
Physics Law That Turns Every US Election Into a Coin Flip
The numbers keep coming up the same. In 2000, the popular vote margin was half a percentage point; in 2016, just over two; in 2024, 1.5. Three elections across a quarter-century, spanning wildly different candidates, media climates, and geopolitical moments, all landing within statistical spitting distance of a draw. Political scientists have been arguing about why for decades. A team of physicists in Vienna think they may have found the structu…
Empirical Validation of the Polarization Transition in a Double-Random Field Model of Elections
We model bipartisan elections where voters are exposed to two forces: local homophilic interactions and external influence from two political campaigns. The model is mathematically equivalent to the random field Ising model with a bimodal field. When both parties exceed a critical campaign spending, the system undergoes a phase transition to a highly polarized state where homophilic influence becomes negligible, and election outcomes mirror the …
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