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The Polls Weren't Wrong

Autor Carl Allen
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 sep 2024
Interpreting poll data as a prediction of election outcomes is a practice as old as the field, rooted in a fundamental misunderstanding of what poll data means.
By first understanding how polls work at a fundamental level, this book gives readers the ability to discern flaws in the current methods. Then, through specific political examples from both the United States and the United Kingdom, it is shown how polls famously derided as "wrong" were, in fact, accurate. While polls are not always accurate, the reasons we can and can’t (rightly) call them "wrong" are explained in this book.
This book will equip readers with the tools to navigate the mismatch of expectations. It is not intended to replace more technical applications of statistics but is accessible to anyone interested in learning more about how poll data should be understood, compared to how it’s currently misunderstood.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032483023
ISBN-10: 1032483024
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 82
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: CRC Press
Colecția Chapman and Hall/CRC
Locul publicării:Boca Raton, United States

Public țintă

General

Cuprins

Preface  1. Public Consumption of Data: Some Historical Perspective  2. Polls  3. What Makes a Poll “Wrong” Part 1  4. Introducing: Ideal Polls  5. Throw it in the Average  6. What Makes a Poll “Wrong” Part 2  7. Introducing: Simultaneous Census, Present Polls, and Plan Polls  8. What’s For Lunch?  9. The Fallacy of Margin (Spread) Analysis  10. The Fallacy of Proportion Analysis  11. Instrument Error: Weighted Results and Literal Weight  12. What’s (actually) For Lunch?  13. Real Polls + Bad Math = Fake Errors  14. My Simultaneous Census  15. Introducing: Adjusted Poll Values  16. Compensating Errors and Poll Masking  17. Welcome to Mintucky  18. Mintucky Results  19. Mintucky Poll Error & Jacob Bernoulli  20. The Point Spread Problem  21. Remembering Nick Panagakis (1937-2018)  22. Finding the Base of Support  23. Trump-Clinton 2016  24. The Law of 50% + 1  25. The Clintons’ Lessons  26. Trump-Clinton-3rd Party 2016  27. We* Don’t Talk About Utah  28. Informing A Prediction  29. One Number Can Tell You A Lot  30. Don’t Call It a “Rule” & How To Report Polls  31. UK Elections & Brexit  32. The Polls Weren’t Wrong About Brexit  33. UK General Election Polls: Not Wrong Either  34. The Future, and “Try It”

Notă biografică

Carl Allen is a researcher and analyst of sports and political data. His background includes quantitative analysis for the University of Louisville Baseball, as well as MLB data for Stats Perform. Currently, Carl is the owner of Triple Digit Speed Pitch, a company that partners with schools and youth sports organizations for sports-themed fundraising events in Ohio. Carl’s current research interests include inefficiencies in political betting markets and improving polling methods. When he’s not analyzing political data, Carl teaches English to adults, and he still finds time for MLB and NFL analysis. Carl earned his BS from the University of Louisville in 2012 (Exercise Physiology, Spanish) and MS in 2013 (Sport Administration). You can find Carl on social media and Substack: @RealCarlAllen.

Recenzii

"Refreshing and lucid, methodically pedantic account what polls in fact do and do not tell us. Scathing and rigorous discussion how media covering elections in the First-Past-The-Post electoral system of the United States repeatedly attributes its own shortcomings in analysis to political polls."
-Julius Lehtinen, Editor-in-chief of Europe Elects
"Carl Allen has written a truly groundbreaking book that is a must-read for anyone interested in statistics or polling. Whether you’re already an expert in the field or a total neophyte, this book has something for everyone.  And as the author poignantly points out, veteran pollsters often have as much to learn as the general public.
By walking readers through the fundamental underpinnings of statistical polls, the author establishes a rigorous baseline framework through which we can view modern polling.  The author then masterfully pivots to illustrate how many modern practitioners in the field have abandoned these principles altogether.  And finally, the reader is shown the tangible cost of the polling industry’s errors—that the intrinsic objective of polling, providing an unbiased assessment of public opinion, has been lost in a sea of pseudoscience.
For anyone who wants to understand the basis for modern polling, this book is for you.For anyone who wants to understand how the polling industry got to this point and how we can fix it, this book is for you.  For anyone seeking to understand why the outcomes of the 2016 U.S. Presidential election and the 2017 Brexit Referendum were not the shock outcomes that the media represented, this book is for you.The polls weren’t wrong."
-Nick Migliacci, Senior Vice President, Caesars Entertainment
"As society not only tolerates, but in many cases rewards, misinformation, statistical literacy is a skill that has grown in importance, arguably on par with literacy itself. Statistics education, although improving, has historical left a poor taste in the mouth of general education students, through an overemphasis on theory and computation rather than an appreciation of the value of the insights quantitative analyses can generate. Carl Allen takes the reader through a journey towards statistical literacy through the incredibly consequential subject of election forecasting, debunking conventional wisdom on the meaning of polls, and how they should be factored into a probabilistic predictions. Allen's prose are inviting; demystifying both the subject matter and the quantitative material through a thorough tour of our collective history of misunderstanding what polls are telling us, and how these misunderstandings can be cured through creative analogies found in the statistical literature. Whether you're interested in predicting the upcoming presidential election, or (hopefully) future ones, this book is an essential read."
-Eric Eager, VP of Football Analytics, Carolina Panthers 

Descriere

This book will equip readers with the tools to navigate the mismatch of expectations. It is not intended to replace more technical applications of statistics but is accessible to those interested in learning about how poll data should be understood.