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| Expert Survey× | Randomized Response Technique× | |
|---|---|---|
| Campo | Political Science | Political Science |
| Famiglia | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Anno di origine≠ | — | 1965 |
| Ideatore≠ | Comparative party-positioning research (Castles & Mair; Chapel Hill team) | Stanley L. Warner |
| Tipo≠ | Survey of subject-matter experts to measure latent positions | Sensitive-question survey technique |
| Fonte seminale≠ | Bakker, R., de Vries, C., Edwards, E., Hooghe, L., Jolly, S., Marks, G., Polk, J., Rovny, J., Steenbergen, M., & Vachudova, M. A. (2015). Measuring Party Positions in Europe: The Chapel Hill Expert Survey Trend File, 1999–2010. Party Politics, 21(1), 143–152. DOI ↗ | Warner, S. L. (1965). Randomized Response: A Survey Technique for Eliminating Evasive Answer Bias. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 60(309), 63–69. DOI ↗ |
| Alias | Expert judgment survey, Party expert survey, Chapel Hill Expert Survey, Expert placement survey | RRT, Randomized response, Warner's randomized response, Forced-response technique |
| Correlati≠ | 4 | 3 |
| Sintesi≠ | An expert survey measures latent political quantities — most often parties' positions on policy dimensions — by asking a panel of country and subject-matter experts to place the objects of interest on structured numerical scales. Averaging many experts' judgments yields position estimates, while the spread across experts provides a built-in measure of uncertainty and reliability. The Chapel Hill Expert Survey is the leading example, producing comparable measures of European parties' positions on ideology, European integration, and many specific issues over time. | The randomized response technique (RRT) is a survey method for asking about sensitive or stigmatized topics while guaranteeing each respondent's privacy. Introduced by Stanley Warner in 1965, it uses a randomizing device — a coin, die, or spinner — to determine, privately and unknown to the interviewer, whether the respondent answers the sensitive question or an alternative. Because the analyst knows only the probability distribution of the device and not the outcome for any individual, no answer can be traced to a particular question, yet the population prevalence of the sensitive trait can be recovered exactly by inverting the known randomization. |
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