May 14, 2008

On the Road Again

As I noted in an earlier post (here), I’m a biker. A serious one. A racer, even — a silly thing for a senior citizen to be, but so be it. Anyway, due to circumstances beyond my control I haven’t been on the bike since last August. But today, for the first time in longer than I care to remember, I rolled out my lovely Pinarello and went for a ride. Boy, am I out of shape.

In commemoration of this event I’m pleased to bring you Kraftwerk, my forever-favorite group (which, thanks to Henry Farrell, I had the pleasure of seeing live a couple of years ago), performing an abridged version of the grand anthem of cycling. Even if — perish the thought! — you’re not into techo-pop, the visuals are great.

Pax Corleone

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Here is a clever piece by John C. Hulsman and A. Wess Mitchell analyzing some major schools of thought about American foreign policy — liberal institutionalism, neoconservatism, and realism — through the lens of “The Godfather.” I wonder what my IR colleagues make of this.

[Hat tip to PolySigh]

May 13, 2008

"The Daily Show" as Journalism -- Or Not

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The folks over at Pew’s Project for Excellence in Journalism have just completed a comprehensive analysis of Comedy Central’s “Daily Show,” starring the perpetually smirky Jon Stewart. The point of departure for their study was that Stewart recently tied with heavyweight teleprompter-readers Brian Williams, Dan Rather, Tom Brokaw, and Anderson Cooper in a nationwide survey as as America’s most admired journalist. (Of course, if you pay much attention to the network news shows these days, which seem to consist primarily of ads for drug companies, a headline and sound-bite or two, and lots of lifestyle fluff, you’ll realize that such recognition comes closer to guilt by association than to a true honor.)

Anyway, the Pew researchers decided to explore the extent to which what’s shown on the “Daily Show” accords with journalistic standards like comprehensive coverage of various types of news and equal time for representatives of various viewpoints. The results are contained in a lengthy report, HERE.

The main conclusions?

The results reveal a television program that draws on the news events of the day but picks selectively among them—heavily emphasizing national politics and ignoring other news events entirely. In that regard, The Daily Show closely resembles the news agenda of a number of cable news programs as well as talk radio.

The program also makes heavy use of news footage, often in a documentary way that employs archival video to show contrast and contradiction, even if the purpose is satirical rather than reportorial. At other times, the show also blends facts and fantasy in a way that no news program hopefully ever would.

In short, “The Daily Show” doesn’t pass muster as a news program. Despite the wealth of interesting detail presented in the Pew report, this is not exactly a “Stop the presses!” conclusion. After all, “The Daily Show” appears on Comedy Central and, as Jon Stewart himself has sometimes had to remind his critics, “We’re not a news show.”

May 11, 2008

Helping Hands for George Stephanopoulos

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In the spirit of John Sides’s selfless offer of himself and David Park as regression-runners and findings-interpreters for New York Times columnist David Brooks (HERE), I hereby volunteer John and David’s services to ABC News political analyst George Stephanopoulos as well. (I myself am much too busy blogging about cats to become involved in such an undertaking.)

This offer is prompted by the following exchange between anchorman Charles Gibson and Stephanopoulos on May 6, 2008, the evening of the Indiana and North Carolina primaries:

GIBSON: And joining me now is our chief Washington correspondent, George Stephanopoulos, who is here in New York tonight. …

STEPHANOPOULOS: … Let’s look at those numbers. … We did ask a question I know in the exit polls about Reverend Wright, Barack Obama’s former pastor and whether that was influencing voters. What did we find? Right down the middle. About half said it’s important, about half said it was unimportant. Of those who said it was important, look at this in Indiana, 70% went for Senator Clinton. Of those who thought it was unimportant, again right down the middle, 65% for Barack Obama. So what you thought about the importance of Reverend Wright basically determined your vote.

Now, George Stephanopoulos, who graduated summa cum laude from an Ivy League school (Columbia), is no dummy. The concluding sentence of his summary of the survey results is so fundamentally flawed, though, that one can only wonder what they were teaching in all those political science courses that he took (he was a political science major) or whether the time he spent in the Clinton White House so addled him that it’s all gotten jumbled in his head.

The most basic lesson one is supposed to learn in one’s very first research methods course is — repeat after me, everybody — “Correlation is not the same as causation.” Now, with that thought in mind, go back and re-read the offending sentence: “So what you thought about the importance of Reverend Wright basically determined your vote.” Do you begin to see the problem?

The causal spin that Stephanopoulos put on these survey results assumes, in effect, that heading into the Indiana and North Carolina primaries most voters weren’t committed to one candidate or the other. Then the Reverend Wright issue emerged, and — presto! — it split the Democratic electorate into two groups, Clinton voters and Obama voters.

Instead, let’s begin with a decidedly different, and altogether more plausible assumption. Let’s say that heading into these two primaries, which after all occurred very late in the primary season, most voters were already pretty well committed to one or the other of the two candidates. Then the Reverend Wright issue emerged. For many of those who were already intending to vote for Clinton, that issue reinforced their existing inclination; certainly it wouldn’t have transformed them from Clinton supporters into Obama supporters. For many (presumably most) of those who were already intending to vote for Obama, though, the Wright issue wasn’t sufficient to persuade them of the error of their ways and move them into the Clinton column.

Then on election day along came an exit poll interviewer asking them how important the issue had been to them. Naturally, many of the Clintonites cited it as a reason for voting for Clinton rather than Obama — because it had been consistent with that intention and also because it had also emerged late enough to still be retrievable from memory. But how many Obama supporters would cite it as a reason for having voted for Obama? As the issue played out, that simply wouldn’t make sense; it was a one-way or “valence” issue, and its valence was anti-Obama. So Clinton supporters were more likely to cite the Wright issue as underlying their vote choice than were Obama supporters — the same statistical finding that Stephanopoulos reported but with a very different interpretation.

The problem, stated more generally, is that when pollsters ask voters which issues were most important to them, what the voters tell them can’t be taken at anything approaching face value. People just aren’t reliable reporters of their own mental processes. (The classic statement of this point is Nisbett and Wilson’s “Telling More Than We Can Know: Verbal Reports on Mental Processes,” Psychological Review 84 (May 1977), pp. 231-259.) In the context under consideration here, this unreliability typically takes the form of ex post facto rationalizations: Those who were predisposed to vote for Candidate X cite the issues that X had raised as the decisive ones, and those who were predisposed to vote for Candidate Y cite Y’s issues as decisive. Look back over several decades of ANES post-election surveys and you’ll see this pattern time and time again. Or save yourself the trouble and hunt down a copy of Wendy Rahn, Jon Krosnick, and Marijke Breuning’s “Rationalization and Derivation Processes in Survey Studies of Political Candidate Evaluation” (American Journal of Political Science 38 (August 1994), pp. 582-600), the bottom line of which is that “Voters’ reports of the reasons for their preferences were principally rationalizations.”

My point isn’t that the Reverend Wright matter was wholly inconsequential. It may well have figured into the decision calculus of some late-deciders in Indiana and North Carolina. But that’s a world away from concluding based on the data that Stephanopoulos had in hand that “What you thought about the importance of Reverend Wright basically determined your vote.”

Columbia has an excellent political science department. Perhaps as a public service they should bring back their erstwhile star student for some refresher courses in research methods and electoral behavior. Or maybe Stephanopoulos will decide to take me up on my sincere offer of John and David’s assistance.

May 10, 2008

An Engineer's Guide to Cats

I’ll get back to serious — or at least semi-serious — posts soon, but having spent the last few days convalescing with the able assistance of my beloved 19-year-old orange stripey blind Gooseberry, I figure it’s time for another post about cats. This one has been around for a while, but perhaps you haven’t seen it.

May 09, 2008

Will Obama Unify the Democratic Party?

Below is the percentage of Democrats voting for the Democratic nominee for President, drawing on National Election Studies data from 1952-2004.

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This graph should be the starting point for any discussion of a “deeply divided” or “fractured” Democratic Party. The party loyalty of Democrats has been increasing over time and has essentially hovered at 90% since 1992. (And Republicans are similarly loyal to the Republican nominee.)

A central finding of political science research into campaign effects is this: during the general election, presidential campaigns tend to reinforce one’s preexisting partisan leaning. In other words, they tend to unify the party.

The tendency now, as in the NY Times and Washington Post pieces linked above, is to ponder, ominously, “divides” within the Democratic Party and, elsewhere, to quote meaningless exit poll data about how many Clinton voters say they will stay home or vote for McCain. Instead, journalists and commentators should be grappling with the reinforcement effect and party loyalty.

Early data from this election also portends a high degree of party loyalty. See this, from an April Pew poll. Already, large percentages of Democrats (77%) say they will vote for Obama against McCain. (Party loyalty among Democrats in the unlikely Clinton-McCain race is 81% — which, given sampling error, is indistinguishable from 77%.) Republicans are, right now, more unified (85% say they will vote for McCain), but this isn’t surprising, since the Republican race has been decided for much longer.1

Thus, it’s not clear why Pew entitles the table “Obama’s Struggle within the Democratic Base.” Obama does just as well as Clinton among Democrats. Moreover, and most importantly, he will likely do better as soon as Clinton drops out and the general election campaign begins its inevitable reinforcement effect.

*****

Addendum: Below is a picture of what reinforcement looks like. The graph derives from National Anneberg Election Study data. It presents the percent of Democrats who said they would vote for Gore over Bush. The data derive from samples taken daily from December 14, 1999, until November 6, 2000. Early on, about 78% of Democrats said they would vote for Gore. That increased to 87% over the course of the campaign.

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[1] Independents, by the way, favor Obama over McCain, 52-41. That difference should be close to statistical significance.

May 06, 2008

On the Relationship between Journalism and Social Science

In response to my post below on David Brooks, Ian McDonald comments:

Your last paragraph (tongue in cheek, I guess) makes me wonder: what do you think is the right symbiosis between good journalism and good social science?

I ask because: I think good journalism needs to take risks. I am a big David Brooks fan and I will cut him a lot of slack on factual precision, because he asks good questions, and he always entertains me. While he writes about his social disparity ideas a lot, I don’t agree that he’s completely vested in one interpretation (see the last paragraph of this Atlantic piece). http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2001/12/brooks.htm

Sure, some pundits get it wrong, habitually, because of self-serving motives, and thus poison the conversation. I think you would agree: Brooks isn’t one of them.

At the same time, nobody wants to be flat out wrong (I think). Maybe social scientists and journalists really can help each other. Proactively and hate free. And still make deadlines and stay interesting.

Ian raises a very good question. I completely agree that social scientists and journalists can work together.

My further thoughts are these. First, I want to distinguish between David Brooks and journalism. Obviously, he writes columns, not news articles, and thus is in the business of commentary, not reporting. Brooks is also often an amateur social scientist, and, as such, I hold him to a weaker version of the standards to which academics are held. That is to say, I wasn’t at all joking when I said this:

If it’s asking too much for Brooks to spend half an hour with the National Election Studies before writing a column like this, then consider this my job application. David Brooks, I will make pretty graphs and easy-to-read cross-tabulations for you. Just say the word. (David Park is ready to run your regressions.) Give us a call.

I would not demand that David Brooks worry about all of the ideals of empirical social science: rigorous theories, careful conceptualization and measurement, appropriate evidence, caution in drawing inferences from inherently limited data. But what I am suggesting — simple analysis to confirm the most basic thrust of a hypothesis — is not asking too much. In fact, given the platform Brooks has at the Times, it is his responsibility not to present arguments without making more of an effort to confirm them with data, where appropriate. I think his bad arguments — e.g., red and blue states — actually do violence to our discourse about politics. (See also Barry’s comment on my original post.) If Brooks wants to take risks by proffering new ideas without digging up the necessary evidence, then he needs to moderate his tone to convey the appropriate uncertainty.

Yes, I realize that columnists have an incentive to be provocative. Yes, they write on deadline. And yes, most do not have the necessary skills to analyze large datasets. That is why my offer to help Brooks do analysis is not at all facetious or sarcastic. I really would do it. And for much less than the $4000 Bill Kristol is paid to write each column.

What about reporters and journalists?

Continue reading "On the Relationship between Journalism and Social Science" »

May 05, 2008

Demography Is Not King, or Why David Brooks Is a Hedgehog, Not a Fox

In this recent piece, David Brooks sees a nation divided:

…some social divides, mostly involving ethnicity, have narrowed. But others, mostly involving education, have widened. Today there is a mass educated class. The college educated and non-college educated are likely to live in different towns. They have radically different divorce rates and starkly different ways of raising their children. The non-college educated not only earn less, they smoke more, grow more obese and die sooner…

…The ensuing segmentation has reshaped politics. We’re used to the ideological divide between Red and Blue America. This year’s election has revealed a deep cultural gap within the Democratic Party, separating what Stuart Rothenberg calls the two Democratic parties.

In state after state (Wisconsin being the outlier), Barack Obama has won densely populated, well-educated areas. Hillary Clinton has won less-populated, less-educated areas. For example, Obama has won roughly 70 percent of the most-educated counties in the primary states. Clinton has won 90 percent of the least-educated counties. In state after state, Obama has won a few urban and inner-ring suburban counties. Clinton has won nearly everywhere else.

What is wrong with this characterization? First, Brooks uses aggregate-level data (from counties) to infer the individual-level behavior of voters. This is the ecological fallacy. When you look at actual exit polls from some recent primaries, the results are far less stark. In Pennsylvania, voters without a college degree favored Clinton, 58-42. Voters with a college degree favored Clinton too, 51-49. (See also Ohio.) Somehow I don’t see the “deep cultural gap.”

Second, more systematic data show that the education “divide” within the Democratic party is at times non-existent and, when it exists, has not “widened” over time. Using the National Election Studies, I will compare the views of Democratic respondents with and without a college degree. Below is the percent among each group who voted for the Democratic nominee for president:

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Democrats have grown more loyal over time (as discussed briefly in this post). Moreover, any education “gap” is miniscule as of 2004, and certainly hasn’t grown over time.

More data, and more on Brooks-as-hedgehog, are below the fold.

Continue reading "Demography Is Not King, or Why David Brooks Is a Hedgehog, Not a Fox" »

The Worst City in the U.S. for Asthma Sufferers Is ...

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…Knoxville, TN. And the best is Colorado Springs, CO.

Those are the bipolar results of the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America’s new rating of the 100 largest metropolitan areas in the U.S. in terms of “the most challenging places to live with asthma.”

The Foundation based its ratings on a comprehensive survey of prevalence factors (e.g., crude death rate for asthma), risk factors (e.g., the annual pollen score and the existence of public smoke-free laws), and medical factors (e.g., the number of asthma specialists).

To check out the metropolitan area nearest you, click HERE.

And by the way, let me remind all you asthma sufferers that you should never sneeze in the way the person pictured above is doing. As a public service, HERE is the link to a post I contributed a few months ago on proper sneeze etiquette.