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Below results based on the '2011' year search
Total number of records returned: 10

1
Poster
A New Approach to the Study of Political Participation
Levin, Ines

Uploaded 07-26-2011
Keywords political participation
mixture modeling
Abstract In this poster I present a new statistical procedure for the study of political participation based on mixture modeling and simultaneous consideration of involvement in multiple political activities. In this model, the relationship between underlying utilities and participation probabilities is regulated by a parameter that captures individual propensities toward political participation. First, I present the results of a simulation study used to evaluate the properties of the methodology. Then, I present the results of an application to survey data from the 1990 American Citizen Participation Study (Verba, Schlozman, and Brady, 1995), where the method is used to test hypotheses regarding the impact of resources and civic skills on political participation. Lastly, I propose a new dual-process explanation of the way participation decisions are made, which is consistent with empirical results, and is rooted in recent findings in cognitive psychology.

2
Poster
Bounds for Logistic Regression Coefficients with Nonignorable Missing Outcomes
Kenkel, Brenton

Uploaded 07-27-2011
Keywords partial identification
bounds
missing data
measurement error
Abstract I develop a new method to estimate logistic regression coefficients when there is nonignorable missingness or measurement error in the outcome variable. The estimator finds the set of all coefficient vectors that could be obtained under any assumption about the missing outcomes.

3
Poster
Latent Variables and Rolling Panels: A New Approach to Modeling Campaign Effects
Therriault, Andrew

Uploaded 07-27-2011
Keywords panel data
latent variables
campaign effects
advertising
persuasion
public opinion
voters
elections
Abstract Election panels which reinterview participants in rolling cross-sectional surveys offer new opportunities to study campaign effects, but also present unique methodological challenges. I develop an original approach to modeling this data, and demonstrate how its application leads to much stronger evidence for informing and persuasion effects from campaign ads than that found in existing research

4
Poster
WhentheSTARs Align:What IOs AreMoreConducivetoDemocratization
Chyzh, Olga

Uploaded 07-31-2011
Keywords democracy
spatial dependence
diffusion
international organization
spatial regression
m-STAR
Abstract The scholars of democracy have long noted the tendency of democratic states to cluster in time and space. While most theoretical explanations of this phenomenon posit causal mechanisms related to spatial interdependence (e.g. diffusion, socialization), very few studies have conducted adequate empirical tests of these theories. This methodological oversight is due both to the scarcity of available statistical techniques that allow for testing these types of effects, as well as to the methodological sophistication of the existing techniques. Yet the value of empirical inferences is largely dependent on correct model specification. I develop several hypotheses linking state democracy level to membership in international organizations (IOs) that vary in scope, institutional capacity, and centralization. I test these hypotheses using several alternative approaches that allow to correct or explicitly model spatial and temporal dependence. I start with more common approaches, such as the use of a lagged dependent variable, fixed effects, and panel corrected standard errors, and then re-estimate the results using a multi-parametric spatio-temporal autocorrelation model (m-STAR). In this final model, I test my hypotheses using overlapping IO memberships in different types of IOs, as well as geographic contiguity as the spatial weights. I argue that while the lagged dependent variable, fixed effects, and panel-corrected standard errors show more desirable qualities than a naïve model, the m-STAR provides for the most adequate testing, from both a methodological and a theoretical perspective. Unlike the former three techniques that treat spatial and temporal dependence as a nuisance, the M-STAR allows for explicit modeling and estimation of contemporaneous spatial effects. Its ability to estimate spatial effects occurring within the same time-period as the unit-level effects makes this model particularly useful at evaluating the hypotheses posited in this paper, as well as such phenomena as diffusion and socialization more broadly.

5
Poster
Moments in Time: Studying European Conflict using a Change-Point Model
Nieman, Mark

Uploaded 07-31-2011
Keywords change-point
constructivist
time regime
structural break
Europe
system
conflict
Abstract Constructivist theories provide insights into understanding systemic violence in Europe by accounting for preference formation in multiple time periods. Thus, constructivism explains how the influence of a set of independent variables on a dependent variable can change over time. By allowing preferences to change, constructivist theories accounts for changes in the direction and statistical significance of weakly exogenous explanatory variables over multiple time periods. Owing to this, different rationalist theories may be appropriate to explain different time periods. To test this, counts of militarized interstate dispute involving European states from 1870 to 2001 are analyzed. Bayesian MCMC change-point models provide an effective tool for identifying multiple time periods and generating unbiased and efficient estimates of explanatory variables. Because change-points are calculated probabilistically, the determinates of structural breaks are also examined by testing for Granger causality. Results generate support for constructivist theories because the influence of variables and statistical significance change depending on the time period. These results differ from tradition models which ignore structural breaks in the dependent variable. Lastly, Granger causality tests indicate that changes in systemic power and democratization are determinates of these structural breaks.

6
Poster
Stronger Instruments by Design
Morgan, Jason
Keele, Luke

Uploaded 07-31-2011
Keywords 2SLS
instrumental variables
matching
non-parametric
Abstract There is growing interest in natural experiments in political science. Natural experiments are often analyzed with instrumental variable estimators reflecting a belief that combining the power of natural random assignment with an instrumental variable approach will solve many of the research design problems endemic to social science. Here, we highlight how weak instruments can interact with the assumption of random assignment of the instrument. When the instrument is not randomly assigned, weak instruments produce bias that is not alleviated by additional data. We demonstrate how matching combined with a reverse caliper can be used to strengthen an instrument within a subset of the overall study. We start by presenting an alternative non-parametric instrumental variable estimator first proposed by Rosenbaum (1996) that allows us to combine matching with an IV estimator. Unlike the standard 2SLS IV estimator, this non-parametric approach provides accurate confidence intervals and consistent causal estimates even when the instrument is weak. A further advantage of this non-parametric method is the opportunity it provides to probe the random assignment assumption with a sensitivity test. We provide substantive examples of the proposed approach with a reevaluation of a recent paper that uses rainfall as an instrument for voter turnout in US counties (Hansford & Gomez 2010).

7
Poster
Estimating the Effects of Unemployment on Voter Turnout
Incantalupo, Matthew

Uploaded 08-01-2011
Keywords design-based inference
causal inference
voting
participation
turnout
unemployment
inequality
Abstract Unemployed Americans face numerous hardships: lost income, financial uncertainty, family struggles, strained or broken social ties, and issues with both mental and physical health. Job loss is a profound personal experience, but unlike many other consequences of hard economic times, it has not been strongly linked to changes in political behavior. In this study, I identify a causal link between involuntary job loss and reported voter turnout in recent elections. Under low unemployment, job loss has a negative effect on voter turnout. During a period of high unemployment, such as the one caused by the current economic recession, job loss has a positive effect on voter turnout.

8
Poster
Testing Theoretical Structures of Mass Preferences
Jackson, Natalie

Uploaded 08-01-2011
Keywords public opinion
path analysis
multidimensional scaling
ideology
mass preferences
Abstract This project applies path analysis and multidimensional scaling models to complex, interrelated theoretical concepts to investigate the causal origins of policy preferences in the mass public. Ideology, in the sense of the liberal-conservative continuum, has often been used to explain policy preferences in the mass public with considerable success, but the causal origins of ideology are unclear due to the complexity of the concept. In this project, a theoretical model is developed that posits that ideology is created from, and therefore caused by, culture, as defined by and operationalized in the Cultural Theory framework developed by Douglas and Wildavsky (1982). However, the theoretical relationship between culture and ideology is different for those who consider themselves "liberal" or "conservative" (the ideologues) than it is for those who consider themselves "moderate" or non-ideologues. Ideologues will demonstrate a strong direct relationship between ideology and preferences, whereas moderates' preferences will be more directly related to their culture than ideology. Additionally, the concepts of culture and ideology should be more spatially similar for moderates than for ideologues since moderates are less likely to make strong distinctions between political views and their overall worldviews. This poster applies path analysis to determine which direct and indirect relationships are strongest between culture, ideology, and preferences. Multidimensional scaling analysis is then used to examine the spatial configuration of the constructs for moderates and ideologues.

9
Poster
A Split Population Model for Middle-Category Inflation in Ordered Survey Responses
Bagozzi, Benjamin

Uploaded 08-01-2011
Keywords split-population models
ordered dependent Variables
survey data
Europe
public opinion
Abstract Recent research find that, for social desirability reasons, uninformed individuals disproportionately give ``neither agree nor disagree'' type responses to survey attitude questions, even when a ``don't know'' option is available (Sturgis et al. 2010). Such ``face-saving don't knows'' inflate the indifference (i.e. middle) categories of ordered attitude variables with non-ordered responses. When this inflation occurs within one's dependent variable, estimates from ordered probit/logit models are biased and inefficient. This poster develops a set of mixture models (the middle-inflated ordered probit with and without correlated errors) that estimate and account for the presence of ``face-saving'' responses in middle-categories of ordered survey response variables, and applies these models to (1) simulated data and (2) a commonly studied survey question measuring support for EU-membership among EU-candidate countries. Findings suggest that, when middle-category inflation is present in one's ordered dependent variable, the estimates obtained from middle-category mixture models are less biased than---and in some cases substantively distinct from---the estimates obtained from ``naive'' ordered probit models.

10
Poster
Hookworm Eradication as an Instrument for Schooling in the American South
Henderson, John

Uploaded 08-01-2011
Keywords hookworm
education
participation
rockefeller sanitary commission
instrumental variables
matching
permutation inference
sensitivity analysis
Abstract I exploit an historical natural experiment to assess whether more schooling causes greater vote participation. Specifically, I leverage the Rockefeller Sanitary Commission’s campaign to eradicate hookworm infection in the early-20th century American South as a plausibly-exogenous instrument for primary and secondary education. I evaluate two county-level interventions from the public health campaign: (a) exposure to the campaign and (b) pre-campaign hookworm incidence. Due to the presence of possible confounders, I use pair (genetic) and dose (optimal) matching techniques to strengthen the exogeneity of both instruments. I then use Rosenbaum permutation inference to assess the inclusion strength of the campaign exposure instrument, and I employ a simultaneous sensitivity analysis to evaluate robustness to remaining bias. Throughout, I find a robust and positive effect of education on participation.


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