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Event Data Analysis×Manifesto Coding×Wordfish Scaling×
DziedzinaPolitical SciencePolitical SciencePolitical Science
RodzinaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineLatent structure
Rok powstania20012008
TwórcaConflict-studies and computational-social-science traditions (McClelland, Schrodt, King)Manifesto Research Group / Comparative Manifesto Project (CMP/MARPOR)Jonathan Slapin and Sven-Oliver Proksch
TypAutomated coding and analysis of who-did-what-to-whom event recordsQuantitative content analysis of party manifestosUnsupervised latent-position model for word-count data
Źródło pierwotneSchrodt, 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: 9780199244003Slapin, 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 ↗
Inne nazwyEvent data coding, Political event data, Conflict event data, CAMEO event codingCMP coding, MARPOR coding, Manifesto content analysis, Party manifesto codingWordfish text scaling, Poisson scaling of texts, Unsupervised text scaling, Wordfish position estimation
Pokrewne344
PodsumowanieEvent 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.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.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Event Data Analysis · Manifesto Coding · Wordfish Scaling. Pobrano 2026-06-25 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare