Võrdle meetodeid
Vaata valitud meetodeid kõrvuti; erinevad read on esile tõstetud.
| Spatial Voting Model× | NOMINATE× | |
|---|---|---|
| Valdkond | Political Science | Political Science |
| Perekond≠ | MCDM | Latent structure |
| Tekkeaasta≠ | 1957 | 1985 |
| Looja≠ | Harold Hotelling, Duncan Black & Anthony Downs | Keith T. Poole and Howard Rosenthal |
| Tüüp≠ | Formal model of electoral and legislative choice | Spatial scaling model of roll-call voting |
| Algallikas≠ | Downs, A. (1957). An Economic Theory of Democracy. Harper & Row. ISBN: 9780060417505 | Poole, K. T., & Rosenthal, H. (1985). A Spatial Model for Legislative Roll Call Analysis. American Journal of Political Science, 29(2), 357–384. DOI ↗ |
| Rööpnimetused | Spatial Theory of Voting, Downsian Model, Proximity Voting Model, Median Voter Model | DW-NOMINATE, W-NOMINATE, Nominal Three-Step Estimation, Poole-Rosenthal scores |
| Seotud≠ | 4 | 3 |
| Kokkuvõte≠ | The spatial voting model represents voters and political alternatives as points in a common geometric policy space and assumes that each voter supports the alternative nearest to their own ideal point. Rooted in Hotelling's location theory, Duncan Black's 1948 single-peakedness result, and Anthony Downs's 1957 economic theory of democracy, the model yields two foundational results: the median voter theorem, which identifies the equilibrium policy in one dimension, and the Downsian prediction that two vote-seeking parties converge toward the center. It is the workhorse formalism behind modern empirical estimation of political positions. | NOMINATE — Nominal Three-step Estimation — is the family of spatial scaling procedures developed by Keith Poole and Howard Rosenthal to recover legislators' ideological positions from roll-call votes. Each legislator and the yea and nay outcomes of each vote are placed in a low-dimensional space, and a normal (Gaussian) deterministic utility plus a random shock governs choices. Fitted by maximum likelihood, NOMINATE produces the canonical ideal-point coordinates used to chart polarization across two centuries of the U.S. Congress, with the dynamic DW-NOMINATE variant allowing positions to drift smoothly over time. |
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