Comparar métodos
Revisa los métodos seleccionados uno junto a otro; las filas que difieren aparecen resaltadas.
| Event Data Analysis× | Manifesto Coding× | Qualitative Comparative Analysis× | Wordfish Scaling× | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Campo | Political Science | Political Science | Political Science | Political Science |
| Familia≠ | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline | Latent structure |
| Año de origen≠ | — | 2001 | 1987 | 2008 |
| Autor original≠ | Conflict-studies and computational-social-science traditions (McClelland, Schrodt, King) | Manifesto Research Group / Comparative Manifesto Project (CMP/MARPOR) | Charles C. Ragin | Jonathan Slapin and Sven-Oliver Proksch |
| Tipo≠ | Automated coding and analysis of who-did-what-to-whom event records | Quantitative content analysis of party manifestos | Set-theoretic, configurational comparative method | Unsupervised latent-position model for word-count data |
| Fuente seminal≠ | Schrodt, P. A. (2012). Precedents, Progress, and Prospects in Political Event Data. International Interactions, 38(4), 546–569. 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 | Ragin, C. C. (1987). The Comparative Method: Moving Beyond Qualitative and Quantitative Strategies. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN: 9780520058347 | Slapin, J. B., & Proksch, S.-O. (2008). A Scaling Model for Estimating Time-Series Party Positions from Texts. American Journal of Political Science, 52(3), 705–722. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | Event data coding, Political event data, Conflict event data, CAMEO event coding | CMP coding, MARPOR coding, Manifesto content analysis, Party manifesto coding | QCA, csQCA, fsQCA, Configurational comparative method | Wordfish text scaling, Poisson scaling of texts, Unsupervised text scaling, Wordfish position estimation |
| Relacionados≠ | 3 | 4 | 3 | 4 |
| Resumen≠ | Event data analysis converts streams of news reports into structured records of political interactions — who did what to whom, when — and aggregates them into time series of cooperation and conflict between actors. Each event is coded as a source actor, an action type drawn from an ontology such as CAMEO, a target actor, and a date. Modern systems extract these events automatically from millions of news stories, enabling near-real-time measurement of interstate and intrastate behavior for forecasting and analysis. | 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. | Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA) is a set-theoretic, configurational method that identifies which combinations of conditions are necessary or sufficient for an outcome across a set of cases. Developed by Charles Ragin, it treats each case as a configuration of set memberships, builds a truth table of all logically possible combinations, and uses Boolean algebra to minimize them into the simplest expressions that account for the outcome. It bridges qualitative case knowledge and cross-case generalization, embracing causal complexity through conjunctural causation, equifinality, and asymmetry. | Wordfish scaling is an unsupervised text-as-data method that estimates a single latent position for each political document — a party manifesto, a legislative speech, a press release — directly from its word frequencies, without any reference texts or hand coding. Introduced by Slapin and Proksch in 2008, it models word counts as draws from a Poisson distribution whose rate depends on a document position and word-specific parameters, recovering, for example, a left–right ordering of parties purely from how often each word appears in each text. |
| ScholarGateConjunto de datos ↗ |
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