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Cambridge handbook of experimental political science / / edited by James N. Druckman [and three others] [[electronic resource]]
Cambridge handbook of experimental political science / / edited by James N. Druckman [and three others] [[electronic resource]]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xiv, 562 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)
Disciplina 320.072
Soggetto topico Political science - Methodology
Political science - Research
Political science - Experiments
ISBN 1-139-06317-0
1-107-21397-5
1-280-77305-7
1-139-07543-8
9786613683823
0-511-92145-4
1-139-07998-0
1-139-06967-5
1-139-08225-6
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Political Science; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables; List of Figures; Contributors; Acknowledgments; INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER 1 Experimentation in Political Science; 1. The Evolution and Influence of Experiments in Political Science; 2. Diversity of Applications; 3. Diversity of Experimental Methods; 4. The Volume; 5. Conclusion; References; Part I DESIGNING EXPERIMENTS; CHAPTER 2 Experiments: An Introduction to Core Concepts; 1. What Is an Experiment?; 2. Random Assignment or Random Sampling?; 3. Internal and External Validity
4. Documenting and Reporting Relationships5. Ethics and Natural Experiments; 6. Conclusion; Appendix: Introduction to the Neyman-Rubin Causal Model; Noncompliance; References; CHAPTER 3 Internal and External Validity; 1. Internal Validity; Comparisons with Experimental Economics; Threats to Internal Validity; Ways to Improve; 2. External Validity; Threats to External Validity; Ways to Improve; 3. Balance between Internal and External Validity; 4. Future Work; References; CHAPTER 4 Students as Experimental Participants: A Defense of the "Narrow Data Base"
1. The "Problem" of Using Student SubjectsDimensions of External Validity; Evaluating External Validity; 2. Statistical Framework; 3. Contrasting Student Samples with Other Samples; 4. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 5 Economics versus Psychology Experiments: Stylization, Incentives, and Deception; 1. Stylized versus Contextually Rich Experimental Scenarios; Logic of Stylization; Limits of Stylization; 2. Use of Monetary Incentives; Monetary Incentives as a Means of Rewarding Accuracy or Reducing Noise; Monetary Incentives as a Means of Controlling for Preferences
Monetary Incentives as a Means of Measuring Social PreferencesDoes the Scale of Monetary Incentives Matter?; Potential Problems with Use of Monetary Incentives; 3. Use of Deception; Lack of Deception in Experimental Economics; Use of Deception in Experimental Political Psychology; References; Part II THE DEVELOPMENT OF EXPERIMENTS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE; CHAPTER 6 Laboratory Experiments in Political Science; 1. Causal Inference: The Strength of Experiments; Negativity in Campaign Advertising; Racial Cues in Local News Coverage of Crime; Facial Similarity as a Political Cue
2. The Issue of GeneralizabilityMundane Realism; Sampling Bias; "Drop-In" Samples; Expanding the Pool of Online Participants; Sampling from Online Research Panels; 3. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 7 Experiments and Game Theory's Value to Political Science; 1. Cooperative Game Theory and Experiments; Coalition Formation; 2. Noncooperative Game Theory and Experiments; Voter Competence; Jury Decision Making; Contributions to Other Fields; 3. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 8 The Logic and Design of the Survey Experiment: An Autobiography of a Methodological Innovation; 1. Logic of Discovery
2. A Design Classification
Record Nr. UNINA-9910462182903321
Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Cambridge handbook of experimental political science / / edited by James N. Druckman [and three others] [[electronic resource]]
Cambridge handbook of experimental political science / / edited by James N. Druckman [and three others] [[electronic resource]]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xiv, 562 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)
Disciplina 320.072
Soggetto topico Political science - Methodology
Political science - Research
Political science - Experiments
ISBN 1-139-06317-0
1-107-21397-5
1-280-77305-7
1-139-07543-8
9786613683823
0-511-92145-4
1-139-07998-0
1-139-06967-5
1-139-08225-6
Classificazione POL000000
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Political Science; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables; List of Figures; Contributors; Acknowledgments; INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER 1 Experimentation in Political Science; 1. The Evolution and Influence of Experiments in Political Science; 2. Diversity of Applications; 3. Diversity of Experimental Methods; 4. The Volume; 5. Conclusion; References; Part I DESIGNING EXPERIMENTS; CHAPTER 2 Experiments: An Introduction to Core Concepts; 1. What Is an Experiment?; 2. Random Assignment or Random Sampling?; 3. Internal and External Validity
4. Documenting and Reporting Relationships5. Ethics and Natural Experiments; 6. Conclusion; Appendix: Introduction to the Neyman-Rubin Causal Model; Noncompliance; References; CHAPTER 3 Internal and External Validity; 1. Internal Validity; Comparisons with Experimental Economics; Threats to Internal Validity; Ways to Improve; 2. External Validity; Threats to External Validity; Ways to Improve; 3. Balance between Internal and External Validity; 4. Future Work; References; CHAPTER 4 Students as Experimental Participants: A Defense of the "Narrow Data Base"
1. The "Problem" of Using Student SubjectsDimensions of External Validity; Evaluating External Validity; 2. Statistical Framework; 3. Contrasting Student Samples with Other Samples; 4. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 5 Economics versus Psychology Experiments: Stylization, Incentives, and Deception; 1. Stylized versus Contextually Rich Experimental Scenarios; Logic of Stylization; Limits of Stylization; 2. Use of Monetary Incentives; Monetary Incentives as a Means of Rewarding Accuracy or Reducing Noise; Monetary Incentives as a Means of Controlling for Preferences
Monetary Incentives as a Means of Measuring Social PreferencesDoes the Scale of Monetary Incentives Matter?; Potential Problems with Use of Monetary Incentives; 3. Use of Deception; Lack of Deception in Experimental Economics; Use of Deception in Experimental Political Psychology; References; Part II THE DEVELOPMENT OF EXPERIMENTS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE; CHAPTER 6 Laboratory Experiments in Political Science; 1. Causal Inference: The Strength of Experiments; Negativity in Campaign Advertising; Racial Cues in Local News Coverage of Crime; Facial Similarity as a Political Cue
2. The Issue of GeneralizabilityMundane Realism; Sampling Bias; "Drop-In" Samples; Expanding the Pool of Online Participants; Sampling from Online Research Panels; 3. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 7 Experiments and Game Theory's Value to Political Science; 1. Cooperative Game Theory and Experiments; Coalition Formation; 2. Noncooperative Game Theory and Experiments; Voter Competence; Jury Decision Making; Contributions to Other Fields; 3. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 8 The Logic and Design of the Survey Experiment: An Autobiography of a Methodological Innovation; 1. Logic of Discovery
2. A Design Classification
Record Nr. UNINA-9910790172003321
Cambridge : , : Cambridge University Press, , 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Cambridge handbook of experimental political science / / edited by James N. Druckman ... [et al.]
Cambridge handbook of experimental political science / / edited by James N. Druckman ... [et al.]
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Cambridge ; ; New York, : Cambridge University Press, 2011
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xiv, 562 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)
Disciplina 320.072
Altri autori (Persone) DruckmanJames N. <1971->
Soggetto topico Political science - Methodology
Political science - Research
Political science - Experiments
ISBN 1-139-06317-0
1-107-21397-5
1-280-77305-7
1-139-07543-8
9786613683823
0-511-92145-4
1-139-07998-0
1-139-06967-5
1-139-08225-6
Classificazione POL000000
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Cambridge Handbook of Experimental Political Science; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of Tables; List of Figures; Contributors; Acknowledgments; INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER 1 Experimentation in Political Science; 1. The Evolution and Influence of Experiments in Political Science; 2. Diversity of Applications; 3. Diversity of Experimental Methods; 4. The Volume; 5. Conclusion; References; Part I DESIGNING EXPERIMENTS; CHAPTER 2 Experiments: An Introduction to Core Concepts; 1. What Is an Experiment?; 2. Random Assignment or Random Sampling?; 3. Internal and External Validity
4. Documenting and Reporting Relationships5. Ethics and Natural Experiments; 6. Conclusion; Appendix: Introduction to the Neyman-Rubin Causal Model; Noncompliance; References; CHAPTER 3 Internal and External Validity; 1. Internal Validity; Comparisons with Experimental Economics; Threats to Internal Validity; Ways to Improve; 2. External Validity; Threats to External Validity; Ways to Improve; 3. Balance between Internal and External Validity; 4. Future Work; References; CHAPTER 4 Students as Experimental Participants: A Defense of the "Narrow Data Base"
1. The "Problem" of Using Student SubjectsDimensions of External Validity; Evaluating External Validity; 2. Statistical Framework; 3. Contrasting Student Samples with Other Samples; 4. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 5 Economics versus Psychology Experiments: Stylization, Incentives, and Deception; 1. Stylized versus Contextually Rich Experimental Scenarios; Logic of Stylization; Limits of Stylization; 2. Use of Monetary Incentives; Monetary Incentives as a Means of Rewarding Accuracy or Reducing Noise; Monetary Incentives as a Means of Controlling for Preferences
Monetary Incentives as a Means of Measuring Social PreferencesDoes the Scale of Monetary Incentives Matter?; Potential Problems with Use of Monetary Incentives; 3. Use of Deception; Lack of Deception in Experimental Economics; Use of Deception in Experimental Political Psychology; References; Part II THE DEVELOPMENT OF EXPERIMENTS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE; CHAPTER 6 Laboratory Experiments in Political Science; 1. Causal Inference: The Strength of Experiments; Negativity in Campaign Advertising; Racial Cues in Local News Coverage of Crime; Facial Similarity as a Political Cue
2. The Issue of GeneralizabilityMundane Realism; Sampling Bias; "Drop-In" Samples; Expanding the Pool of Online Participants; Sampling from Online Research Panels; 3. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 7 Experiments and Game Theory's Value to Political Science; 1. Cooperative Game Theory and Experiments; Coalition Formation; 2. Noncooperative Game Theory and Experiments; Voter Competence; Jury Decision Making; Contributions to Other Fields; 3. Conclusion; References; CHAPTER 8 The Logic and Design of the Survey Experiment: An Autobiography of a Methodological Innovation; 1. Logic of Discovery
2. A Design Classification
Altri titoli varianti Handbook of experimental political science
Experimental political science
Record Nr. UNINA-9910828174703321
Cambridge ; ; New York, : Cambridge University Press, 2011
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui