This section of the VVSG defines words (terms) that are used in the other
parts of the VVSG, particularly in requirements text.
NOTE: Readers may already be familiar with definitions for many
of the words in this section, but the definitions here often may differ in
small or big ways from locality usage because they are used in special ways in
the VVSG.
Terminology for standardization purposes must be sufficiently precise and
formal to avoid ambiguity in the interpretation and testing of the standard.
Terms must be defined to mean exactly what is intended in the requirements of
the standard, no more and no less. Consequently, this terminology may differ
from common election and plain English usage, and may be unsuitable for
applications that are beyond the scope of the VVSG. Readers are especially
cautioned to avoid comparisons between this terminology and the terminology
used in election law.
Any term that is defined neither in this terminology standard nor in any of
the referenced documents has its regular (i.e., dictionary) meaning.
Each term is followed by a normative definition. Some terms are further explained with informative text following the indicator "Discussion."
1-of-M: |
N-of-M voting where N = 1. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
absentee ballot: |
(1) Ballot provided to an absent voter. (2) Ballot resulting from absentee voting. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
absentee voting: |
Voting that can occur unsupervised at a location chosen by the voter. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
accessible voting station: |
Voting station equipped for individuals with disabilities referred to in 42 USC 15481 (a)(3)(B). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
Acc-VS: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
activation device: |
Programmed device that creates credentials necessary to initiate a voting session using a specific ballot configuration. Discussion: This covers a range of devices such as electronic pollbooks and card activators that encode a token with credential information necessary to determine the appropriate ballot configuration for the voter (e.g., affiliation or precinct). The credentials on the token are used to call up and display the correct ballot on a DRE or EBP. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
active period: |
Span of time during which a vote-capture device either is ready to begin a voting session or is in use in a voting session. See Part 1 Section 8.2. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
administrator: |
Role defined in Part 1 Section 5.4. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
affiliation: |
Association with a political party. Discussion: Affiliation with a political party does not imply endorsement by that political party. See also, endorsement. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
alert time: |
The amount of time the equipment will wait for detectible voter activity after issuing an alert before going into an inactive state requiring poll worker intervention. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
application logic: |
Software, firmware, or hardwired logic from any source that is specific to the voting system, with the exception of border logic. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
archival: |
(Media) Able to preserve content for a period of time without significant loss. Discussion: In the context of voting, the relevant period of time is usually 22 months. See Part 1 Section 6.5.3. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
archivalness: |
Ability of a medium to preserve its content for a period of time without significant loss. Discussion: In the context of voting, the relevant period of time is usually 22 months. See Part 1 Section 6.5.3. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ATI: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
audio VEBD: |
VEBD that communicates ballot information to the voter using sound. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
audio-tactile interface: |
Electronic voter interface that does not require visual reading of a ballot. Discussion: Audio is used to convey information to the voter and sensitive tactile controls allow the voter to convey information to the voting system. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
audit device: |
Voting device dedicated exclusively to processes of verification and/or independent assessment of the performance of the voting system. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
audit: |
Verification of statistical or exact agreement of records from different processes or subsystems of a voting system. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
Average Voter Confidence: |
A metric used in the VPP, but not used to pass or fail systems. Mean confidence level expressed by the voters that the system successfully recorded their votes. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
Average Voting Session Time: |
Mean time taken per voter to complete the process of activating, filling out, and casting the ballot. Metric used in the VPP, but not used to pass or fail systems. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot activation: |
Initiation of a voting session on a DRE or EBP such that the voter is presented with a ballot having the ballot configuration specified by the voting credentials. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot activator: |
Used to activate the ballot for a DRE or EBM. Typically an electronic pollbook or hand-held ballot activation device. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot configuration: |
Set of contests in which voters of a particular group (e.g., political party and/or election district) are entitled to vote. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot image: |
Electronically produced record of all votes cast by a single voter. Discussion: A ballot image might be an uninterpreted bitmap image, a transient logical representation of the votes, or an archival record (a cast vote record). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot question: |
Contest in which the choices are Yes and No. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot rotation: |
Process of varying the order of the contest choices within a given contest. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot style: |
Concrete presentation of a particular ballot configuration. Discussion: A given ballot configuration may be realized by multiple ballot styles, which may differ in the language used, the ordering of contests and contest choices, etc. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ballot: |
(1) Collection of votes produced by one voter in one voting session (as in “ballot summary” or “rejected ballot record”). (2) Collection of all votes cast by one voter in one voting session (as in “cast ballot”). (3) Cast vote record (as in “evidence that the ballot was available for review by the voter”). (4) Ballot configuration (as in “ballot definition”). (5) Ballot style (as in “ballot design”). (6) Presentation of every contest included in a particular ballot style, possibly with votes (as in “For privacy, the ballot must be visible only to the voter”). (7) Collection of one or more pieces of paper that presents every contest included in a particular ballot style and, when cast, serves as a cast vote record. (8) VEBD function of interacting with a voter to potentially create a ballot (as in “ballot activation”) or mark an existing ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
benchmark: |
Quantitative point of reference to which the measured performance of a system or device may be compared. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
black-box: |
Testing technique focusing on testing functional requirements, those requirements being defined in an explicit specification. It treats the item being tested as a "black box," with no examination being made of the internal structure or workings of the item. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
border logic: |
Software, firmware, or hardwired logic that is developed to connect application logic to COTS or third-party logic. Discussion: Although it is typically developed by the voting system manufacturer, border logic is constrained by the requirements of the third-party or COTS interface with which it must interact. It is not always possible for border logic to achieve its function while conforming to standard coding conventions. For this reason, border logic should be minimized relative to application logic and where possible, wrapped in a conforming interface. An example of border logic that could not be so wrapped is a customized boot manager that connects a bootable voting application to a COTS BIOS. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
callable unit: |
(Of a software program or analogous logical design) Function, method, operation, subroutine, procedure, or analogous structural unit that appears within a module. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
candidate: |
Person contending in a contest for office. Discussion: A candidate may be explicitly presented as one of the contest choices or may be a write-in candidate. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
cast ballot: |
Ballot in which the voter has taken final action in the selection of contest choices and irrevocably confirmed his or her intent to vote as selected. See also read ballot and counted ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
cast vote record: |
Archival record of all votes produced by a single voter. Discussion: Cast vote records may be in electronic, paper, or other form. Electronic cast vote records are also called ballot images. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
CCOS: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
central election official: |
Role defined in Part 1 Section 5.4. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
central tabulator: |
Tabulator that counts votes from multiple precincts at a central location. Discussion: Voted ballots are typically placed into secure storage at the polling place and then transported or transmitted to a central tabulator. A tabulator that may be configured for use either in the precinct or in the central location may satisfy the requirements for both Precinct tabulator and Central tabulator. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
central-count optical scanner: |
Optical scanner used as a central tabulator. Discussion: Most machines in this class are special purpose machines that use reflected light to identify marks at specific locations on the ballot. They are designed to read stacks of ballots at a time. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
challenged ballot: |
Ballot cast by a voter whose eligibility to vote is disputed by someone who is not an election official. See also provisional ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
choice: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
CIF: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
class: |
Identified set of voting systems or voting devices sharing a specified characteristic or characteristics. See Part 1 Section 2.5. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
closed primary: |
Primary election in which the voter receives a ballot containing only those party-specific contests pertaining to the political party with which the voter is affiliated, along with non-party-specific contests presented at the same election. Discussion: Usually, unaffiliated voters are permitted to vote only on non-party-specific contests. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
combined precinct: |
Two or more precincts assigned the same polling place. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
Common Industry Format: |
Format described in ISO/IEC 25062:2006 "Common Industry Format (CIF) for Usability Test Reports" [ISO06e]. Discussion: CIF is the format required for summative usability test reporting. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
completed system response time: |
The time taken from when the voter performs some detectible action to when the voting system completes its response and settles into a stable state (e.g., finishes "painting" the screen with a new page). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
configuration data: |
Non-executable input to software, firmware, or hardwired logic, not including vote data. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
conformity assessment: |
Demonstration that specified requirements relating to a product, process, system, person or body are fulfilled. ([ISO04a]) No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
contest choice: |
That with which a vote in a given ballot position is associated (e.g., a candidate, or the value Yes or the value No). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
contest: |
(1) A single decision being put before the voters (e.g., the selection of candidates to fill a particular public office or the approval or disapproval of a constitutional amendment). Discussion: This term subsumes other terms such as "race," "question," and "issue" that are sometimes used to refer to specific kinds of contests. (2) Subdivision of a ballot pertaining to a single decision being put before the voters. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
core logic: |
Subset of application logic that is responsible for vote recording and tabulation. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
COTS: |
Software, firmware, device or component that is used in the United States by many different people or organizations for many different applications and that is incorporated into the voting system with no manufacturer- or application-specific modification. Discussion: (1) The expansion of COTS as Commercial Off-The-Shelf is no longer helpful, since much of what satisfies the requirements is non-commercial software that is not available in stores. The acronym COTS is used here only because it is familiar to the audience. (2) By requiring "many different applications," this definition deliberately prevents any application logic from receiving a COTS designation. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
counted ballot: |
Read ballot whose votes are included in the vote totals. Discussion: A provisional or challenged ballot that is not accepted may be read, but it is not counted. See cast ballot, read ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
credential issuance: |
Determination of what ballot configuration is appropriate for a given voter and creation of the voting credentials necessary for ballot activation. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
cross-party endorsement: |
Endorsement of a given contest choice by two or more political parties. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
cumulative voting: |
Voting variation in which the voter is entitled to allocate a fixed number of votes (N) over a list of M contest choices or write-ins. Discussion: Unlike N-of-M voting, cumulative voting allows the voter to allocate more than one vote to a given contest choice. The voter is not obliged to allocate all N votes. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
CVR: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
device: |
Physical contrivance and any supporting supplies, materials, and logic that together form a functional unit that performs assigned tasks as an integrated whole. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
direct record electronic: |
Combination VEBD and tabulator that gathers votes via an electronic voter interface, records voting data and ballot images in memory components, and produces a tabulation of the voting data. Discussion: A typical DRE presents contest choices to the voter on an electronic monitor, and after the voter finishes the ballot the voter's votes are stored locally on the computer. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
DRE: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
EBM: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
EBM-marked paper ballot: |
Ballot marked by an EBM. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
EBP: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ECOS: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
election district: |
Administrative division in which voters are entitled to vote in contests that are specific to that division, such as those for state senators and delegates. Discussion: An election district may overlap multiple precincts, and a precinct may overlap multiple election districts (see split precinct). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
election judge: |
Role defined in Part 1 Section 5.4. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
election management system: |
Tabulator used to prepare ballots and programs for use in casting and counting votes and to consolidate, report, and display election results. Discussion: This device receives results data from the vote-capture devices, accumulates the results, and reports the accumulated results. Typically, the election management system will interact with several different classes of voting devices. The EMS receives election results from electronic media devices in one or more of four connections: modem, local bus, direct serial, and/or local area Ethernet. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
election official: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
election verification: |
Confirmation that all recorded votes were counted correctly. See also voter verification. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
electronic ballot printer: |
EBM that prints an entire ballot, including ballot style-dependent content. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
electronic device: |
Voting device that uses electricity. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
electronic voter interface: |
Component of an electronic vote-capture device that communicates ballot information to the voter and accepts input from the voter. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
electronically-assisted ballot marker: |
VEBD that produces an executed, human-readable paper ballot as a result, and that does not make any other lasting record of the voter's votes. Discussion: One kind of EBM presents contest choices to the voter on an electronic monitor; after the voter finishes the ballot, the voter's choices are printed on a paper ballot that is the only record of the voter's choices. However, vote-by-telephone systems that are in use at the time of this writing are also EBMs. The voter uses an audio interface (remotely) and a paper ballot is produced (centrally). An EBM may mark ballot positions on a pre-printed ballot or it may print an entire ballot (the latter kind are called EBPs); however, in any event, the ballot produced is assumed to be human-readable and comparable to an MMPB. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
EMPB: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
EMPB-capable optical scanner: |
Optical scanner used to count EMPBs. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
EMS: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
endorsement: |
Approval by a political party (e.g., as the candidate that the party elects to field in a particular contest and/or as the candidate that should receive straight party votes). A contest choice may be endorsed by more than one party. See also, affiliation. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
end-to-end: |
(1) (Security) Supporting both voter verification and election verification. (2) (Generically) Covering the entire elections process, from election definition through the reporting of final results. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
error rate: |
Ratio of the number of errors that occur to the volume of data processed. ([VSS2002] I.3.2.1) Discussion: The specific error rate used in the benchmark for voting system accuracy is report total error rate. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
failure rate: |
Ratio of the number of failures that occur to the volume of data processed. Discussion: Failures may be divided, for example, into user-serviceable and non-user-serviceable categories, and the measure of volume varies by device class. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
failure: |
(Voting system reliability) Event that results in (a) loss of one or more functions, (b) degradation of performance such that the device is unable to perform its intended function for longer than 10 seconds, (c) automatic reset, restart or reboot of the voting device, operating system or application software, (d) a requirement for an unanticipated intervention by a person in the role of poll worker or technician before the test can continue, or (e) error messages and/or audit log entries indicating that a failure has occurred. (Source: Expanded from [VSS2002] I.3.4.3.) Discussion: In plain language, failures are equipment breakdowns, including software crashes, such that continued use without service or replacement is worrisome to impossible. Normal, routine occurrences like running out of paper are not considered failures. Misfeeds of ballots into optical scanners are handled by a separate benchmark (Requirement Part 1: 6.3.3-A), so these are not included as failures for the general reliability benchmark. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
fault: |
Flaw in design or implementation that may result in the qualities or behavior of the voting system deviating from the qualities or behavior that are specified in the VVSG and/or in manufacturer-provided documentation. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
find: |
Determine and deliver a finding. (Based on [Oxford93] definition #11.) No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
finding: |
Result of a formal evaluation by a test lab or accredited expert; verdict. (Based on [Oxford93] definition #6.) No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
hardwired logic: |
Logic implemented through the design of an integrated circuit; the programming of a Programmable Logic Device (PLD), Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), Peripheral Interface Controller (PIC), or similar; the integration of smaller hardware components; or mechanical design (e.g., as in lever machines). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
hesitation mark: |
Small dot made by resting the point of a writing utensil on a ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
implementation statement: |
Statement by a manufacturer indicating the capabilities, features, and optional functions and extensions that have been implemented in a voting system. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
independent voter-verifiable record: |
Record produced by an IVVR vote-capture device supporting voter verification (e.g., VVPAT, EBM). The record contains minimally a summary of the electronic CVR. A voter-verifiable paper record is an independent voter-verifiable record. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
initial system response time: |
The time taken from when the voter performs some detectible action (such as pressing a button) to when the voting system begins responding in some obvious way (such as an audible response or any change on the screen). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
innovation class submission: |
Voting system that includes one or more distinct innovative devices. Discussion: See Part 1 Section 2.7.2, Innovation Class Submissions. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
in-person: |
Voting that occurs at a polling place under the supervision of poll workers. Discussion: Also known as poll-site voting. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
inspection: |
Examination of a product design, product, process or installation and determination of its conformity with specific requirements or, on the basis of professional judgment, with general requirements. ([ISO04a]) No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
instant runoff: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
IVVR vote-capture device: |
Vote-capture device that achieves software independence through independent voter-verifiable records. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
IVVR: |
(1) Independent voter-verifiable record. (2) Voting system that achieves software independence through independent voter-verifiable records. |
Logic defect: |
Fault in software, firmware, or hardwired logic. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
manually-marked paper ballot: |
(1) IVVR vote-capture device consisting of a paper ballot and a writing utensil. (2) Paper ballot that was marked by a person using a writing utensil. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
manufacturer: |
Entity with ownership and control over a voting system submitted for testing. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
marginal mark: |
Mark within a voting target that does not conform to manufacturer specifications for a reliably detectable vote. Discussion: See Part 1 Section 7.7.5.1. The word "marginal" refers to the limit of what is detectable by an optical scanner, not the margin of the page. Marks that are outside of voting targets are called extraneous marks. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
MCOS: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
misfeed rate: |
Ratio of the misfeed total to the total ballot volume (see Requirement Part 3: 5.3.5-B). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
MMPB: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
MMPB-capable optical scanner: |
Optical scanner used to count MMPBs. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
module: |
Structural unit of software or analogous logical design, typically containing several callable units that are tightly coupled. Discussion: Modular design requires that inter-module coupling be loose and occur over defined interfaces. A module should contain all elements needed to compile or interpret successfully and have limited access to data in other modules. A module should be substitutable with another module whose interfaces match the original module. In software, a module typically corresponds to a single source code file or a source code / header file pair. In object-oriented languages, this typically corresponds to a single class of object. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
N-of-M: |
Voting variation in which the voter is entitled to allocate a fixed number of votes (N) over a list of M contest choices or write-ins, with the constraint that at most 1 vote may be allocated to a given contest choice. See also cumulative voting. Discussion: The voter is not obliged to allocate all N votes. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
non-executable: |
Declarative or informative in nature; not subject to interpretation or compilation as programming language instructions. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
non-party-specific contest: |
Contest such that eligibility to vote in that contest is independent of political party affiliation or lack thereof. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
observational test: |
Operational test conducted on voting devices during an election, by real voters, to establish confidence that the VVPR is produced correctly when assistive technology is used. Discussion: Devices subjected to observational testing are used for normal collection of votes; the votes so collected are included in the election tally. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
open primary: |
Primary election in which the voter may choose a political party at the time of voting and vote in party-specific contests associated with that party, along with non-party-specific contests presented at the same election. Discussion: Also known as pick-your-party primary. Some states require voters to publicly declare their choice of party at the polling place, after which the poll worker provides or activates the appropriate ballot. Other states allow the voters to make their choice of party within the privacy of the voting booth. Voters also are permitted to vote on non-party-specific contests that are presented at the same election. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
operational test: |
Test conducted on voting equipment in an active (operational) state. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
optical scanner: |
Tabulator that counts votes recorded by means of marks made on the surface of a paper ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
paper-based device: |
Voting device that records votes, counts votes, and/or produces a report of the vote count from votes cast on paper cards or sheets. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
party-specific contest: |
Contest such that eligibility to vote in that contest is restricted based on political party affiliation or lack thereof. Discussion: The affiliation might be the registered affiliation of the voter or it might be an affiliation declared at the time of voting. See closed primary, open primary. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
PCOS: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
Perfect Ballot Index: |
The ratio of the number of cast ballots containing no erroneous votes over the number of cast ballots containing one or more errors (either a vote for an unintended choice, or a missing vote). Metric used in the VPP. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
poll worker: |
Role defined in Part 1 Section 5.4. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
precinct tabulator: |
Tabulator that counts votes at the polling place. Discussion: These devices typically tabulate ballots as they are cast and print the results after the close of polls. For DREs and some paper-based systems, these devices provide electronic storage of the vote count and may transmit results to a central location over public telecommunication networks. A tabulator that may be configured for use either in the precinct or in the central location may satisfy the requirements for both Precinct tabulator and Central tabulator. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
precinct: |
Administrative division in which voters cast ballots at the same polling place. Discussion: It is possible for two or more precincts to cast ballots at a given polling place. See combined precinct. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
precinct-count optical scanner: |
Optical scanner used as a precinct tabulator. Discussion: A PCOS is a special purpose scanner designed to enable the voter to feed his or her own paper ballot—one ballot at a time. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
primary election: |
Election held to determine which candidate(s) will represent a political party for particular offices in the general election and/or to narrow the field of candidates in non-party-specific contests prior to the general election. Discussion: From the functional viewpoint of the voting system, the defining features of a primary election are the presence of party-specific contests and a requirement to report separate totals for the different political parties. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
privacy enclosure: |
Equipment, such as a booth or partition, provided in conjunction with a vote-capture device to make it difficult for anyone other than the voter to determine through visual observation how the voter voted. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
programmed device: |
Electronic device that includes application logic. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
provisional ballot: |
Ballot cast by a voter whose eligibility to vote is disputed by an election official. See also challenged ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
provisional-challenged ballot: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
ranked order: |
Voting variation in which voters express their intent by ordering contest choices from strongest to weakest preference. Discussion: Implementations of ranked order voting differ in whether voters are required to rank every choice and in the algorithm used to determine a winner or winners. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
read ballot: |
Cast ballot that has been interpreted by a tabulator to determine what votes it contains. Discussion: A read ballot may or may not be counted. For example, an optical scan cast ballot that has been scanned successfully is a read ballot. See also cast ballot and counted ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
record: |
(n) Preserved evidence of activities performed or results achieved (e.g., forms, reports, test results). (v) To create a record. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
relevant contest: |
Contest appearing in a ballot style or ballot associated with a given reporting context. Discussion: If a contest is included in a ballot style associated with a given reporting context, that contest is relevant even if no ballots of that style were counted. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
report total error rate: |
Ratio of the report total error to the report total volume (see Requirement Part 3: 5.3.4-B). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
report: |
Self-contained, time stamped, archival record, such as a printout or analogous electronic file that is produced at a specific time and subsequently protected from modification. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
reporting context: |
Scope within which reported totals or counts are calculated (e.g., precinct or election district). Discussion: Reporting contexts may overlap in complex ways; for example, in the case of split precincts, there is not a simple containment relationship between election districts and precincts. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
review-required ballot: |
Ballot that is flagged or separated for some form of manual processing. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
software independence: |
Quality of a voting system or voting device such that a previously undetected change or fault in software cannot cause an undetectable change or error in election outcome. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
split precinct: |
Precinct serving voters from two or more administrative divisions, such as election districts, that may require different ballot configurations. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
spoil: |
(A ballot) To mark or otherwise alter a ballot so as to indicate, in a manner supported by the voting system, that the ballot is not to be cast. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
straight party override: |
Explicit vote that conflicts with the vote(s) implied by a straight party vote. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
straight party voting: |
Voting variation in which a vote in a designated, special contest (in which the choices are political parties) implies votes in accordance with the endorsements of the selected party in all other contents on the ballot in which straight party voting is allowed. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
summative usability testing: |
Operational testing with representative users and tasks to measure the usability (defined as effectiveness, efficiency and satisfaction) of the complete product. Discussion: The purpose of a summative test is to evaluate a product through defined measures, rather than diagnosis and correction of specific design problems, as in formative testing. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
system extent: |
Administrative unit that is the entire scope within which the voting system is used (e.g., a county). Discussion: The system extent corresponds to the top-level reporting context for which the system generates reports. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
tabulator: |
Programmed device that counts votes. Discussion: Any distinction between processing individual votes and processing vote totals that resulted from a previous step is not relevant; both of these constitute "counting votes." No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
test method: |
Description of one or more tests, procedures by which tests are derived, or a combination of these. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
test suite: |
Implementation of a set of operational tests for a particular object (e.g., a specific voting system) or class of objects (e.g., all voting systems than can interpret the language in which the test data are expressed). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
test: |
Procedure used to determine one or more characteristics of an object of conformity assessment. Discussion: A test may be an operational test or a non-operating test (e.g., an inspection). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
testing: |
Determination of one or more characteristics of an object of conformity assessment, according to a procedure. Discussion: "Testing" typically applies to materials, products or processes. ([ISO04a]) No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
third-party logic: |
Software, firmware, or hardwired logic that is neither application logic nor COTS; e.g., general-purpose software developed by a third party that is either customized (e.g., ported to a new platform, as is Windows CE) or not widely used, or source code generated by a COTS package. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
token: |
Physical device or a digital representation (i.e., a software token) that an authorized user of computer services is given to aid in authentication. Also known as a hardware token, authentication token or cryptographic token. Discussion: A hardware token such as a smartcard is sometimes used to activate the ballot; it contains the voter’s credentials, e.g., information needed to determine the correct ballot style. A smartcard token is sometimes used as an authentication mechanism for voting devices used in the polling place, e.g., a DRE, optical scanner, or electronic pollbook. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
Total Completion Score: |
The proportion of users who successfully cast a ballot (whether or not the ballot contains erroneous votes). Failure to cast a ballot might involve problems such as a voter simply “giving up” during the voting session because of an inability to operate the system, or a mistaken belief that one has successfully operated the casting mechanism. Metric used in the VPP. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
VEBD: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
VEBD-A: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
VEBD-V: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
video VEBD: |
VEBD that communicates ballot information to the voter using light (e.g., via a typical electronic display). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
volume test: |
Test conducted in compliance with Requirement Part 3: 5.2.3-D. Discussion: A volume test involves a large number of "test voters" using voting devices in conditions approximating normal use in an election. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
vote: |
(n) Indication of support for a particular contest choice in a manner supported by the voting system. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
vote-capture device: |
Device that is used directly by a voter to vote a ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voted ballot: |
Ballot that has been cast or spoiled. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voter inactivity time: |
The amount of time from when the system completes its response until there is detectible voter activity. In particular, note that audio prompts from the system may take several minutes and that this time does not count as voter inactivity. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
Voter Inclusion Index: |
A measure of voting accuracy and variance, based on the mean accuracy per voter and the associated standard deviation. Each voter is given a certain number of “voting opportunities” within the ballot. The more of these that are successfully completed, the higher the resulting accuracy for that voter. A metric used in the VPP. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voter verification: |
Confirmation by the voter that all votes were recorded as the voter intended. See also election verification. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voter: |
Role defined in Part 1 Section 5.4. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voter-editable ballot device: |
Vote-capture device that gathers votes via an electronic voter interface and allows the voter to alter previously made votes without spoiling the ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voter-verifiable paper audit trail: |
Voting system that supports voter-verification through voter-verifiable paper records. Discussion: This term is sometimes used incorrectly to describe the paper record produced by the systems, which is more accurately described as a voter-verifiable paper record. This type of voting system can be subdivided into (a) paper-roll approaches that record all VVPRs sequentially on a continuous paper roll, and (b) cut-sheet approaches, which produce separate cut-sheets of paper, each containing a VVPR. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voter-verifiable paper record: |
Paper IVVR produced by an IVVR vote-capture device supporting voter verification (e.g., VVPAT, EBM). No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting credentials: |
Items sufficient to enable a DRE or EBP to activate a ballot of the ballot configuration that is appropriate for a given voter. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting device: |
Device that is part of the voting system. Discussion: Components and materials that are vital to the function of the voting device within the voting system, such as smart cards and ballot printers, are considered parts of the device for the purpose of conformity assessment. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting performance protocol: |
Test method that measures how well subjects perform various voting tasks. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting process: |
Entire array of procedures, people, resources, equipment and locations associated with the conduct of elections. See also, voting system. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting session: |
(1) Span of time beginning when a ballot is enabled or activated and ending when that ballot is printed (on an EBM), cast (on a DRE), or spoiled. See Part 1 Section 8.2. (2) Interaction between the voter and vote-capture device that occurs during that span of time. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting station: |
Vote-capture device, together with its privacy enclosure if it is supposed to have one. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting system: |
Equipment (including hardware, firmware, and software), materials, and documentation used to define elections and ballot styles, configure voting equipment, identify and validate voting equipment configurations, perform logic and accuracy tests, activate ballots, capture votes, count votes, reconcile ballots needing special treatment, generate reports, transmit election data, archive election data, and audit elections. See also, voting process. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
voting variation: |
Voting style, option, or feature such as in-person voting, absentee voting, provisional / challenged ballots, review-required ballots, closed primaries, open primaries, write-ins, ballot rotation, straight party voting, cross-party endorsement, split precincts, N-of-M voting, cumulative voting, or ranked order voting. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
VPP: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
VVPAT: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
VVPR: |
No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
white-box: |
Testing technique focusing on testing functional requirements, those requirements being defined in an explicit specification. It treats the item being tested as a "black box," with no examination being made of the internal structure or workings of the item. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |
write-in: |
Vote for a candidate who is explicitly named by the voter in lieu of choosing a candidate who is already listed on the ballot. Discussion: This does not preclude writing in the name of a candidate who is already listed on the ballot. No Comments for this section -- Comments Closed |