Abstract
Legislative stability exists in the House of Representatives, but there is not a consensus on whether this stability is produced by a Preference Induced Equilibrium (PIE), which predict that if preferences are unidimensional an equilibrium can be found at the position of the median legislator, or a Structure Induced Equilibrium (SIE), which predicts that multidimensional legislative preferences must be constrained by institutions to produce stable outcomes. While both explanations predict that roll-call behavior will be unidimensional, they make competing predictions for less constrained behavior such as cosponsorship behavior. By relying on Bayesian item-response methods that allow for the assessment of dimensionality of both cosponsorship behavior and roll-call behavior on a comparable scale--which has been problematic in the past--I provide evidence in support of a SIE in the House. While roll-call behavior is unidimensional, only around 30% of cosponsorship behavior is explained by the first dimension of legislative preferences.
Supplementary materials
Title
Appendix: The Dimensionality of Cosponsorship Behavior in the House of Representatives
Description
Appendix, which includes summaries of data, formulas of indexes, and additional diagnostic statistics.
Actions

![Author ORCID: We display the ORCID iD icon alongside authors names on our website to acknowledge that the ORCiD has been authenticated when entered by the user. To view the users ORCiD record click the icon. [opens in a new tab]](https://preprints.apsanet.org/engage/assets/public/apsa/logo/orcid.png)