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Conventional models of voting behavior depict individuals who judge
governments for how the world unfolds during their time in office.
This phenomenon of retrospective voting requires that individuals
integrate and appraise streams of performance information over
time. Yet past experimental studies short-circuit this
'integration-appraisal' process. In this Element, we develop a new
framework for studying retrospective voting and present eleven
experiments building on that framework. Notably, when we allow
integration and appraisal to unfold freely, we find little support
for models of 'blind retrospection.' Although we observe clear
recency bias, we find respondents who are quick to appraise and who
make reasonable use of information cues. Critically, they regularly
employ benchmarking strategies to manage complex, variable, and
even confounded streams of performance information. The results
highlight the importance of centering the integration-appraisal
challenge in both theoretical models and experimental designs and
begin to uncover the cognitive foundations of retrospective voting.
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