American National Election Studies
The American National Election Studies (ANES) are surveys administered around every federal election in the United States.
Usage
See here for notes on the time series data files.
See here for supplemental notes on the cumulative data files built from those time series studies.
Design
Sampling
The studies have traditionally been administered through face-to-face interviews. Telephony (including CATI eventually) modes were added over time. In 2012, web surveys were added.
Every time series incorporates a fresh cross-section sample. In addition, prior respondents are empaneled and recontacted.
The 2000 study included an experiment to incorporate a new RDD sample.
Weighting
Each time series study's fresh cross-section is designed to be 'self-weighting'.
TODO: document weight design for 2012+ data files
The full time series data file, including fresh cross-section data and panel data, requires weighting. Base weights reflect unequal probabilities of household selection as the PSU. If the household contained more than one eligible adult, the weights are adjusted for unequal probability of selecting the respondent.
Weights are adjusted for non-response bias. The panel sample is adjusted particularly for attrition.Methodology write-up suggests only geographic characteristics are available for this computation.
Weights are post-stratified to CPS targets. Post-stratification is considered necessary when the discrepancy between sample and known population characteristics is larger than 5%, and not necessary when smaller than 2%. Methodology write-up suggests that only one- and two-factor dimensions are used. Weights are trimmed at ~5 times the average.
TODO: document when weights began to be re-scaled to have a mean at 1.
So-called 'post-election weights' use the pre-election weight as the base weight. It is corrected for attrition between the waves. It is also re-raked unless there are significant discrepancies between the demographics of retained and attrited cases. Such re-raking always includes presidential vote choice (if in a presidential election year) (to official certified results) and voter turnout (to estimates by United States Elections Project).
Frequency
Until 2002, the time series studies were administered for both presidential and midterm federal elections (every 2 years). The presidential election studies had two-waves, corresponding to a pre-election interview fielded in the month leading up to election day, and a post-election interview fielded in the month following election day. The midterm election studies had just the post-election component.
In 2002, the studies have been reoriented to always have two waves. The 2002 study is the last administration for a midterm federal election; since then all studies have been restricted to presidential elections.
History
The project was launched by the University of Michigan as the Michigan Election Studies. The National Science Foundation began funding it in 1977, at which point they were renamed to the National Election Studies.
To distinguish the studies from similar projects based in other nations, they became known as the American National Election Studies in 2005.
The studies are still led by UMich but are now in collaboration with Duke, University of Texas at Austin, and Stanford.