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<title>PHYSorg.com: PHYSorg news tagged with: undecided</title>
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     <title>Undecided voters may already have decided, study suggests</title>
   	 <description>Do "undecided" voters actually make their choices before they realize? That is a question University of Virginia psychology professor Brian Nosek and his colleagues are trying to answer.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news144431778.html</link>
	 <category>Other Sciences</category>
	 <pubDate>Tue, 28 Oct 2008 16:56:18 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>Latest Electoral College forecast shows McCain ahead by as many as 27 votes</title>
   	 <description>A new approach to determining which candidate will win the most electoral votes in the U.S. Presidential race factors in lessons learned from the 2004 election and uses sophisticated math modeling. The research will be presented at the annual meeting of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS). </description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news140875838.html</link>
	 <category>Other Sciences</category>
	 <pubDate>Wed, 17 Sep 2008 13:10:38 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>Research shows pollsters how the undecided will vote</title>
   	 <description>As the American Presidential election approaches, pollsters are scrambling to predict who will win. A study by a team of researchers at The University of Western Ontario, Canada, and the University of Padova, Italy, may give pollsters a new way to determine how the undecided will vote, even before the voters know themselves.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news138546125.html</link>
	 <category>Other Sciences</category>
	 <pubDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2008 14:02:05 EST</pubDate>
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     <title>Implicit political attitudes can predict future voting behavior</title>
   	 <description>In many political elections, undecided voters come to a decision about who they will vote for only a few days before the vote, if not the very same day of the election. A new study in the journal Political Psychology reveals that people's future voting decisions are to a significant degree determined by their current automatic mental associations, even when individuals consciously believe that they are still undecided.</description>
     <link>http://www.physorg.com/news133612752.html</link>
	 <category>Medicine &amp; Health</category>
	 <pubDate>Wed, 25 Jun 2008 11:39:12 EST</pubDate>
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