MethodsAug 6, 2018

Video: What are nonprobability polls?

Methodology ReportAug 9, 2018

An examination of the 2016 electorate, based on validated voters

Pew Research CenterAug 3, 2018

When Writing About Survey Data, 51% Might Not Mean a ‘Majority’

U.S. PoliticsJul 18, 2018

Taking Sides on Facebook: How Congressional Outreach Changed Under President Trump

Methodology ReportJul 5, 2018

How Does Pew Research Center Measure the Religious Composition of the U.S.?

Internet & TechApr 9, 2018

Bots in the Twittersphere

MethodsFeb 15, 2018

Commercial Voter Files and the Study of U.S. Politics

MethodsJan 26, 2018

For Weighting Online Opt-In Samples, What Matters Most?

Pew Research CenterMar 1, 2018

Defining generations: Where Millennials end and post-Millennials begin

Methodology ReportDec 18, 2017

Sharing the News in a Polarized Congress

Pew Research CenterFeb 6, 2018

Use of election forecasts in campaign coverage can confuse voters and may lower turnout

MethodsMay 15, 2017

What Low Response Rates Mean for Telephone Surveys

U.S. PoliticsOct 19, 2017

After Las Vegas attack, Democrats in Congress were far more likely than Republicans to mention guns on Facebook

Internet & TechApr 9, 2018

5 things to know about bots on Twitter

MethodsFeb 15, 2018

Q&A;: The growing use of ‘voter files’ in studying the U.S. electorate

MethodsAug 1, 2016

Flashpoints in Polling

Methodology ReportMay 15, 2017

Video: How Does Random Sampling Work?

MethodsFeb 16, 2017

A basic question when reading a poll: Does it include or exclude nonvoters?

U.S. PoliticsFeb 23, 2017

Partisan Conflict and Congressional Outreach

Methodology ReportJun 16, 2017

Q&A;: Pew Research Center’s president on U.S. polling

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