TL;DR
This paper introduces a conservative sequential testing method for post-election audits using hand tallies, aiming to verify election outcomes with controlled error probabilities and adaptive sampling.
Contribution
It develops a new conservative sequential test that incorporates precinct-specific error bounds and allows for different error treatments based on voting technology and precinct size.
Findings
The method provides a conservative P-value for election outcome verification.
Applied to 2006 elections, it demonstrated practical use in real contests.
The approach ensures the probability of incorrect confirmation does not exceed the nominal significance level.
Abstract
There are many sources of error in counting votes: the apparent winner might not be the rightful winner. Hand tallies of the votes in a random sample of precincts can be used to test the hypothesis that a full manual recount would find a different outcome. This paper develops a conservative sequential test based on the vote-counting errors found in a hand tally of a simple or stratified random sample of precincts. The procedure includes a natural escalation: If the hypothesis that the apparent outcome is incorrect is not rejected at stage , more precincts are audited. Eventually, either the hypothesis is rejected--and the apparent outcome is confirmed--or all precincts have been audited and the true outcome is known. The test uses a priori bounds on the overstatement of the margin that could result from error in each precinct. Such bounds can be derived from the reported counts in…
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