Compara mètodes
Revisa els mètodes seleccionats l'un al costat de l'altre; les files que difereixen es ressalten.
| Ideal Point Estimation× | Manifesto Coding× | Wordfish× | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camp≠ | Political Science | Political Science | Psicometria |
| Família≠ | Latent structure | Process / pipeline | Latent structure |
| Any d'origen≠ | 2004 | 2001 | 2008 |
| Autor original≠ | Clinton, Jackman & Rivers (Bayesian formulation); Poole & Rosenthal (spatial tradition) | Manifesto Research Group / Comparative Manifesto Project (CMP/MARPOR) | Jonathan Slapin, Svenja-Sophia Proksch |
| Tipus≠ | Latent-variable spatial model of binary choice data | Quantitative content analysis of party manifestos | Generative text model for dimension reduction |
| Font seminal≠ | Clinton, J., Jackman, S., & Rivers, D. (2004). The Statistical Analysis of Roll Call Data. American Political Science Review, 98(2), 355–370. DOI ↗ | Budge, I., Klingemann, H.-D., Volkens, A., Bara, J., & Tanenbaum, E. (2001). Mapping Policy Preferences: Estimates for Parties, Electors, and Governments 1945–1998. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780199244003 | Slapin, J. B., & Proksch, S. O. (2008). A scaling model for estimating time-series party positions from texts. Journal of Politics, 70(3), 554-569. DOI ↗ |
| Àlies≠ | Ideal point model, Item response theory for roll calls, Spatial voting model, Bayesian ideal points | CMP coding, MARPOR coding, Manifesto content analysis, Party manifesto coding | — |
| Relacionats≠ | 4 | 4 | 5 |
| Resum≠ | Ideal point estimation recovers the latent policy positions — ideal points — of political actors from their observed binary choices, most often legislators' yea/nay votes on roll calls. Building on the spatial theory of voting and formalized as a Bayesian item-response model by Clinton, Jackman, and Rivers in 2004, it places each legislator and each bill in a low-dimensional policy space and estimates positions so that the probability a legislator votes yea increases as the bill's 'yea' outcome moves closer to that legislator's ideal point. | Manifesto coding is the quantitative content-analysis methodology of the Comparative Manifesto Project (CMP/MARPOR) for measuring parties' policy preferences from their election manifestos. Trained coders break each manifesto into quasi-sentences and assign every unit to one of a fixed set of policy categories. Counting how often each category appears yields salience measures, and combining pro- and anti- categories produces position scores such as the left–right RILE index, giving comparable estimates of party positions across more than fifty democracies since 1945. | Wordfish is a statistical model for scaling documents on latent dimensions, developed by Slapin and Proksch (2008). Unlike reference-based methods like Wordscores, Wordfish uses a Poisson generative model to jointly estimate word frequencies and document positions without requiring reference texts or manual annotation. It is particularly useful for estimating time-series changes in policy positions and can scale documents from multiple languages simultaneously. |
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