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Midterm Review

Midterm Review. Renan Levine POL 242 June 14, 2006. Theories and Data I. An empirical theory of politics is an attempt to explain why people behave the way they do politically.  We observe characteristics of people, governments, organizations, states, etc.

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Midterm Review

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  1. Midterm Review Renan Levine POL 242 June 14, 2006

  2. Theories and Data I • An empirical theory of politics is an attempt to explain why people behave the way they do politically.  • We observe characteristics of people, governments, organizations, states, etc. • Characteristics that differ from one person, (etc) to another are called variables. 

  3. Recall: Types of Variables • Nominal variables have categories that have no numerical properties and cannot be “ordered” or “ranked”. Example: Provinces • Ordinal variables are ordered or ranked, but there is no equal unit size between categories • Interval variables are measured using a scale in which the units of measurement are all equal in size. • A36 ‘Arik’ Sharon Feeling Thermometer • Number of police officers per province per 100,000 people

  4. Theories and Data II • We scrutinize variables that are related to each other. • We strive to identify causes for effects we observe. • Why do people vote for the Green Party? • Why do some countries enjoy a high degree of sustained growth but not others? • Why has there been a big increase in gun-related homicides in the GTA? • We try to explain the dependent variable. 

  5. Hypotheses and Variables • A statement positing a relationship between two variables is called a hypothesis. • A hypothesis posits a relationship between independent variable(s) and dependent variables. Independent variables influence the values of the dependent variable.  • Hence, the dependent variable depends on independent variable(s).

  6. Descriptive Statistics • Mean, median, mode. • T-tests, ANOVA to compare differences. • Variance / standard deviation, • Skewness and kurtosis • You should know which measures are best for which types of variables.

  7. Crosstabs • Relationship between two variables can be compared in a tabular form. • Remember to recode data in order to make the crosstab easier to interpret. • Collapse categories with few observations. • Measures of association (Cramer’s V, Kendall’s Tau) can be used to observe strength of comparison

  8. Are you sure the relationship is not due to chance? • Chi-Square tells you whether the relationship is statistically significant. In other words, is the relationship unlikely due to chance. • Chi-Square tests whether the distribution of observations in the contingency table is different than the null hypothesis. • A significant relationship (measured by Chi-Square) is not the same as a strong relationship (measured by Kendall’s Tau, Cramer’s V, etc.) • Recall: difference between one-tailed and two-tailed hypothesis tests.

  9. Tests • Are two variables different? • Are two variables measuring the same thing? • Does it “make sense” to suggest that there is a relationship between these two variables?

  10. Differences • T-test looks at difference in mean level of dependent variable between two groups. • Whether or not the difference between the means depends primarily on two factors: • How big the difference is between the means. • How big the sample is – can we be confident that if we drew the same number – or more – from the population again, that we will get similar results. • ANOVA will allow you to use ordinal or nominal independent variables with more than two categories.

  11. Similarities: Indexing • Are two variables measuring the same thing? Or, how well do two or more variables “go together”? • Cronbach’s alpha used to determine if more than one item is measuring the same thing. • If the alpha is high, then the variables are presumably measuring the same thing, and they can be combined into an index. • Remember that the computer doesn’t know what each variable really is – it just looks at the data.

  12. Plausibility? • Over break, many of you commenced doing qualitative research. • Ways of: • Seeing whether your hypotheses “make sense.” • Generating new hypotheses. • Identifying important variables. • Getting a picture of what is almost always a complicated world.

  13. Focus Groups • Loosely structured, open-ended discussion • Best when exploring areas of personal experience and when comments of one participant may provoke ideas and responses from other participants that they might not have thought of in a one-on-one setting. • Designed to explore ideas/generate hypotheses • Not good at testing hypotheses (small N! non-random sample!) • Except to see whether hypothesis is reasonable – good to observe whether there is evidence of your hypothesized relationship or your subjects think there is a relationship. • Sometimes better when there is no evidence or the focus group suggests a different relationship!

  14. In-Depth Interviews • More flexibility than surveys to dig deep. • How do people really think? Why? • Dig deep! • Give and take with interviewer – much fewer constraints than mass surveys where questions must be same for many people. • See Babbie and Benaquisto or Bryman and Teevan for more guidance.

  15. Expert Interviews • What have other scholars found? • What is still unexplained by scholars? • What variables are important? • Is your theory plausible? • What are some possible alternative explanations?

  16. Eyes on the prize • Ideally, your research either enlightens work you have already done or will inform research you will do this term… • Because this term we will be learning multivariate analysis. • Culminating in multivariate regression.

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