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| Ideal Point Estimation× | Wordscores× | |
|---|---|---|
| תחום≠ | Political Science | פסיכומטריה |
| משפחה | Latent structure | Latent structure |
| שנת המקור≠ | 2004 | 2003 |
| הוגה השיטה≠ | Clinton, Jackman & Rivers (Bayesian formulation); Poole & Rosenthal (spatial tradition) | Michael Laver, Kenneth Benoit, John Garry |
| סוג≠ | Latent-variable spatial model of binary choice data | Text analysis and dimension reduction |
| מקור מכונן≠ | Clinton, J., Jackman, S., & Rivers, D. (2004). The Statistical Analysis of Roll Call Data. American Political Science Review, 98(2), 355–370. DOI ↗ | Laver, M., Benoit, K., & Garry, J. (2003). Extracting policy positions from political texts using words as data. American Political Science Review, 97(2), 311-331. DOI ↗ |
| כינויים≠ | Ideal point model, Item response theory for roll calls, Spatial voting model, Bayesian ideal points | — |
| קשורות≠ | 4 | 5 |
| תקציר≠ | 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. | Wordscores is a text-based scaling method developed by Laver, Benoit, and Garry (2003) that estimates the policy positions of political actors based on word frequencies in their texts. By comparing word usage in reference texts of known positions with test texts, the method infers the latent political dimension of any document without requiring manual coding or training data. |
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