ScholarGate
Pembantu
Latent structureItem response theory / Bayesian latent measurement

Bayesian Item Response Theory in Politics

Bayesian item response theory (IRT) in political science measures latent traits — such as ideology, level of democracy, or political knowledge — from observed binary or ordinal items, treating each item's response probability as a function of a respondent's position on the latent scale. Formalized for politics by Clinton, Jackman, and Rivers (2004) for roll-call votes and extended by Treier and Jackman (2008) to measure democracy as a latent variable, the approach combines item characteristic curves with prior distributions and estimates everything jointly by Markov chain Monte Carlo, yielding full posterior uncertainty for every subject's latent score.

Buka dalam MethodMindTidak lama lagiGuna, banding, dapatkan panduan
Alat & sumber
Muat turun slaid
Pelajari & terokai
VideoTidak lama lagi

Baca kaedah sepenuhnya

Ahli sahaja

Log masuk dengan akaun percuma untuk membaca bahagian ini.

Log masuk

Peta kaedah

Kejiranan kaedah berkaitan — pilih satu nod untuk meneroka.

Sumber

  1. Clinton, J., Jackman, S., & Rivers, D. (2004). The Statistical Analysis of Roll Call Data. American Political Science Review, 98(2), 355–370. DOI: 10.1017/S0003055404001194
  2. Treier, S., & Jackman, S. (2008). Democracy as a Latent Variable. American Journal of Political Science, 52(1), 201–217. DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-5907.2007.00308.x

Cara memetik halaman ini

ScholarGate. (2026, June 22). Bayesian Item Response Theory for Political Measurement. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/ms/political-science/bayesian-irt-politics

Kaedah yang mana?

Letakkan kaedah ini di sebelah kaedah yang paling rapat dengannya dan baca secara bersebelahan — perpustakaan menyusun buku di atas meja; pilihan terletak pada anda.

Bandingkan secara bersebelahan
ScholarGateBayesian Item Response Theory in Politics (Bayesian Item Response Theory for Political Measurement). Dicapai 2026-06-25 daripada https://scholargate.app/ms/political-science/bayesian-irt-politics · Set data: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026