Height important factor in US presidential elections
According to both the scientific literature and popular media, all one needs to win a US presidential election is to be taller than one's opponent. Yet, such claims are often based on an arbitrary selection of elections, and inadequate statistical analysis. Using data on all presidential elections, we show that height is indeed an important factor in the US presidential elections.
Candidates that were taller than their opponents received more popular votes, although they were not significantly more likely to win the actual election. Taller presidents were also more likely to be reelected. In addition, presidents were, on average, much taller than men from the same birth cohort. The advantage of taller candidates is potentially explained by perceptions associated with height: taller presidents are rated by experts (i.e. politicians and historians) as ‘greater’, and having more leadership and communication skills.
"Tall claims? Sense and nonsense about the importance of height of US presidents"; Gert Stulp (Department of Psychology en Department of Behavioural Biology University of Groningen), Abraham P. Buunk (Department of Psychology University of Groningen), Simon Verhulst (Department of Behavioural Biology University of Groningen), Thomas V. Pollet (Department of Social and Organizational Psychology, VU University Amsterdam)
Published in The Leadership Quarterly, 9 October 2012: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1048984312000884
Last modified: | 13 March 2020 01.48 a.m. |
More news
-
05 November 2024
Do parents have any influence on whether their children wear 'pink' or 'grey' glasses?
How does a positive outlook actually develop? How important is upbringing in this regard? And what kind of role does optimism actually play in the daily lives of parents and children? Charlotte Vrijen is trying to find an answer to these questions....
-
10 September 2024
Picking the wrong one again and again
Julie Karsten is researching how experiences involving sexual misconduct influence adolescents’ online choice of partner. She specifically focuses on the question of whether people who have previously been ‘perpetrator’ or ‘victim’ look for one...
-
09 September 2024
People with psychosis often victims of violence
People with psychosis are much more likely to become victims of violence and crime than the general population. This is revealed in the PhD research of Bertine de Vries, which she will defend at the University of Groningen on September 19.