Title: Political Science 5 Lecture 3, 232004
1Political Science 5Lecture 3, 2/3/2004
- 1. Homework 1 due next Tuesday!
- 2. Read Chapter 3 and article for Thursday
- 3. Office Hours
- 4. Hypothesis Examples now on Website
2Review antecedent and intervening variables
- Hypothesis a person who favors national health
insurance is more likely to have voted for
Clinton in 1992. - What is the independent variable?
- What is the dependent variable?
- What could be an antecedent variable?
- What could be an intervening variable?
- What could be a that drove or resulted from this
research?
3One more example(to make sure we really got it)
- Hypothesis the number of years of formal
education had by a voter will affect that voters
propensity to vote - Dependent variable? Independent variable?
- Intervening variables
- Formal education causes a sense of civic duty
- Formal education lets one understand the issues
- Use arrow diagram to tell causal story
4A Note on Causality
- If we say that something (X) is the cause of
something else (Y), we are making three claims - X and Y covary. A change in one variable is
associated with a change in the other. - A change in X precedes the change in Y.
- The covariation between X and Y is not spurrious
(not due to a change in some other variable) and
not just a coincidence.
5What is a concept?
- A concept is an abstraction based on
characteristics of perceived reality. - Concepts should be accurate, precise, and
informative. - In fact, a scientific discipline maintains its
identity because different researchers within it
share a concern for the same concepts. - How is this different from a variable?
6(No Transcript)
7What is the difference between a concept and a
variable?
8What is the difference between a concept and a
variable?
- A variable is a measured concept.
- From the text how can the concept of political
participation become a variable? - There can be more than one variable for a single
concept. - VARIATION refers to differences within a set of
measurements of a variable.
9Measurement I. Knowing a Good Measure When You
See It.
- Conceptual and operational definitions of a
variable - An example voter turnout in the U.S.
- Measurement error and validity
10Conceptual Definitions
- A conceptual definition of a variable states
precisely what you mean when you use a particular
term. - A society that supports democracy is one that
emphasizes tolerance, trust, political activism,
and Post-Materialist values, not just one that
pays lip service to the ideals of democracy. --
Inglehart
11Conceptual Definitions
- A good conceptual definition
- Looks at how other scholars have defined a term,
and goes with the consensus unless there is a
good reason to deviate. - Allows you to test the theory that you want to
test. - Is not circular (for example, does not say that
support for democracy is when the public voices
support for democratic values)
12Operational Definitions
- An operational definition of a variable is a
complete recipe for going out into the world and
measuring a variable. - It helps us make the leap from our subjective
impressions to an objective measure. - Like a recipe in any good cook book, a good
operational definition can be followed by any
other chef.
13Operational Definitions
- To measure support for democracy, Inglehart
uses the World Values/ European Values Survey
from 1995-97 and 1999-2001 and looks at average
levels of agreement with nine statements such as
- Is it good to have a strong leader who does not
have to bother with parliament and elections?
14Voter Turnout in the U.S.The Traditional Measure
- Conceptual Turnout is the percentage of those
who can vote who actually do. - The traditional operational definition is
-
-
- Where Voting Age Population (VAP) includes
noncitizens and convicted felons, but not
citizens living overseas.
15Voter Turnout in the U.S.The Traditional Measure
16Voter Turnout in the U.S.The McDonald Popkin
Measure
- Conceptual Turnout is the percentage of those
who can vote who actually do. - Where Voting Eligible Population is purged of
noncitizens and convicted felons but includes
citizens living overseas.
17Voter Turnout in the U.S.The McDonald Popkin
Measure
18Measurement Validity
- Measurement Validity is highest when the gap
between your conceptual definition and your
operational definition is smallest. - Validity means the extent to which a measurement
procedure measures what it is intended to measure
19Measurement Reliability
- Reliability means the extent to which a
measurement procedure consistently measures
whatever it is supposed to measures
20Example
- Hypothesis courses taught by political
scientists are more worthwhile than those taught
by psychologists. - You and a friend enroll in poli sci and psych
courses, respectively - After two weeks, turns out that your poli sci
course is dreadful - Does this disprove the hypothesis?
- What if the person teaching your course was not a
political scientist after all? - Measurement was inaccurate, so the comparison you
made with your friend is irrelevant to the
hypothesis
21How to test for Reliability
- Test for same results on repeated trials
- E.g. count ballots several times, ask other
people to count them - Get several people to read articles (if testing
orientation of a newspaper) - Problem something may be wrong
- Use two different measures of the same concept
- See if you get similar results
- Two different questions about liberalism
22How to test for validity
- Again correspondence between measure and the
concept it is thought to measure - Hypothesis the larger a citys police force is,
the less crime the city will have. - Use police data on crime. (invalid?)
- Hypothesis the more productive a scholar a
faculty member is, the better teacher they are. - Use student evaluations. (invalid?)
23How to test for validity
- Face validity
- IQ tests Measuring intelligence and exposure to
middle class white culture? Not valid. Matter
of judgment. - Content validity
- Determine the full domain or meaning of a
particular concept - Construct validity
- GRE example
24One more example
- From an actual survey
- Please look at this page and tell me the letter
of the income group that includes all the members
of your family living here in 2002 before taxes.
This should include salaries, wages, pensions,
dividends, interest, and all other income.
25Inglehart article Group Activity
- Answer the following questions
- What is the hypothesis?
- What is the dependent variable?
- Conceptual definition and operational definitions
- What is the independent variable?
- Conceptual and operational definitions
- What is the causal story?
- Are issues of validity or reliability mentioned?