Stochastic Variation: A Comment on Lewis-Beck and Skalaban's 'The R-Square'
Gary King. 1991.
"Stochastic Variation: A Comment on Lewis-Beck and Skalaban's 'The R-Square'".
Political Analysis, 2, Pp. 185–200.
Abstract
In an interesting and provocative article, Michael Lewis-Beck and Andrew Skalaban make an important contribution by emphasizing several philosophical issues in political methodology that have received too little attention from methodologists and quantitative researchers. These issues involve the role of systematic, and especially stochastic, variation in statistical models. After briefly discussing a few points of disagreement, hoping to reduce them to points of clarification, I turn to the philosophical issues. Examples with real data follow.
See Also
- [Paper] Comment on 'Estimating the Reproducibility of Psychological Science' (2016)
- [Paper] Finding New Information for Ecological Inference Models: A Comment on Jon Wakefield, 'Ecological Inference in 2X2 Tables' (2004)
- [Paper] Measuring Total Health Inequality: Adding Individual Variation to Group-Level Differences (2002)
- [Paper] Representation Through Legislative Redistricting: A Stochastic Model (1989)