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economists kerwin kofi charles and melvin stephens jr. investigated a v…

Question

economists kerwin kofi charles and melvin stephens jr. investigated a variety of factors that influence voter turnout in the united states. using survey data that revealed whether respondents voted in national elections and how knowledgeable respondents are about politics, charles and stephens claim that the likelihood of voting is driven in part by potential voters confidence in their assessments of candidates - essentially, the more informed voters are about politics, the more confident they are at evaluating whether candidates share their views, and thus the more likely they are to vote. which choice best describes data in the graph that support charles and stephenss claim? choose 1 answer: a at each point on the political orientation scale, high - information voters were more likely than low - information voters to vote. b only low - information voters who identify as independents had a voting probability below 50%. c the closer that low - information voters are to the ends of the political orientation scale, the more likely they were to vote. d high - information voters were more likely to identify as strong democrats or strong republicans than low - information voters were.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The claim is that the more informed voters are about politics, the more likely they are to vote. Option A shows that at every point on the political - orientation scale, high - information voters are more likely to vote than low - information voters, which directly supports the claim. Option B focuses on low - information independent voters' voting probability, not on the relationship between information and voting likelihood. Option C is about low - information voters' position on the political scale and their voting likelihood, not about the role of information. Option D is about voter identification with political parties, not about the connection between political knowledge and voting.

Answer:

A. At each point on the political orientation scale, high - information voters were more likely than low - information voters to vote.