One in 10 college students changed their minds after debate

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This graph shows how students perceived the two candidates were spinning their answers in the debate.
This graph shows how students perceived the two candidates were spinning their answers in the debate.

Seven in 10 college students believe President Obama won the second presidential debate Tuesday night, even though only about half  identify as Democrats, according to a nationwide poll conducted with a smartphone application co-designed at the University of California, Davis. Women, African American, Hispanic and Asian respondents heavily favored Obama.

In the app’s third trial run, with 2,300 college students across the country participating, 10 percent of participants said the debate changed their minds about whom to vote for, with more than two-thirds switching to Obama. Less than a third shifted to Republican challenger Mitt Romney.

Most of those who shifted their vote choice started out the night undecided.

Respondents signed in to the app from 42 states Tuesday, with three states — South Carolina, Mississippi and Maine — recording a majority of respondents who said Romney won the debate.

“We should take these preliminary findings with a healthy grain of salt, since we're dealing primarily with student participants, and we know that effects can be fleeting, but these findings suggest that this debate may have helped sway independent voters toward Obama,” said Amber Boydstun, an assistant professor of political science at UC Davis who co-designed the app with colleagues at UC Davis; the University of Maryland, College Park; and the University of Arkansas, Little Rock.

The app allows, for the first time, live reaction to a debate on a large scale, with participants able to click buttons that say “agree” or “disagree” as well as “dodge” or “spin” as the candidates speak and answer questions.

The app was used for the first presidential debate on Oct. 3, when about 4,000 students participated in the polling, and again for last week’s vice presidential candidate debate.

Students have been invited to participate by a network of hundreds of political science professors around the country.

In the latest app poll, just more than half of the students said they were Democrats, and 31 percent said they were Republicans. Similarly, 56 percent said they plan to vote for President Obama, and 30 percent said they plan to vote for Romney. 

Many candidate responses during the town hall-style debate were polarizing, Boydstun observed. For instance, Romney’s response to his stance on gun control received his peak in both “agree” and “disagree” clicks.

Although participants tended to agree with Obama, they perceived his response to the question about the Libya embassy attack as the biggest “dodge” of the night.  Respondents also appeared to approve of Candy Crowley as moderator, delivering a surge of “agree” clicks when she fact-checked Romney.

When looking at poll participants by gender, slightly more than half were male. More than 60 percent said they were white; 13 percent Hispanic; 9 percent African American; 9 percent Asian; and 5 percent “other.”

In a breakdown of "agree" and "disagree" clicks by ethnicity, African Americans, followed by Asians, Hispanics, and whites recorded the most "agree" clicks for Obama. Women agreed with Obama more, and Romney less, that men did.

A slide show breaking down response by state, race, gender and other factors is available at the React Labs: Educate website.

Download graphs showing how students perceived the candidates dodged  issues or put a spin on them.

Media Resources

Karen Nikos-Rose, Research news (emphasis: arts, humanities and social sciences), 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

Secondary Categories

Society, Arts & Culture University Society, Arts & Culture Education Society, Arts & Culture University

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