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WORKING PAPER
A Mixed-Membership Approach to the Assessment of Political Ideology from Survey Responses
Gross, Justin
Manrique-Vallier, Daniel
Abstract
We employ mixed-membership (or grade-of-membership) techniques--of
growing popularity in medical diagnostics, psychology, genetics, and
machine learning--in order to identify prototypical profiles of survey
respondents based on their answers to questions aimed at uncovering
their basic orientations or ideological predispositions. In contrast
with factor analytic techniques and IRT approaches, we treat both
manifest and latent variables as categorical. A mixed membership model
may be thought of as a generalization of latent class modeling, in
which individuals act as members of more than one class. This notion
is well-aligned with earlier theoretical work of Zaller, Feldman,
Stimson, and others, who at times envision respondents to be
internally complex, answering survey questions probabilistically
according to what Zaller calls varying ``considerations.'' Reanalyzing
data in this way, we develop new insights into the sorts of
constraints that may structure mass belief systems.
Keywords
attitudes beliefs core values discrete factor analysis grade-of-membership ideology latent structure model latent variables measurement mixed-membership survey response
File
Uploaded
07-13-2012
Document ID Number
1339
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