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Topic Sampling

Topic Sampling

A talk at the 2023 Elections, Public Opinion, and Political Behavior Conference at FSU.

Carlisle Rainey

March 02, 2023
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  1. Topic Sampling Carlisle Rainey Associate Professor Florida State University [email protected]

    Scott Clifford Associate Professor University of Houston [email protected] Thomas Leeper Senior Visiting Fellow London School of Economics [email protected] http://www.carlislerainey.com/talk Slides and papers at How to Generalize from Particular Experiments to a Larger Collection of Possible Experiments
  2. General Problem You want to test a general hypothesis. The

    Supreme Court can move public opinion. You can only test a particular hypothesis. The Supreme Court can move public opinion on af fi rmative action.
  3. Even More General You can imagine many possible experiments to

    test your claim. Pick one. Hope it doesn’t matter.
  4. As you may know, there has been some debate about

    allowing imported drugs from Canada lately. Republicans are more likely to favor allowing imported drugs from Canada, while Democrats are more likely to oppose allowing imported drugs from Canada. We’d like to know your opinion. Do you favor or oppose imported drugs from Canada? As you may know, there has been some debate about marijuana legaliza ti on lately. Democrats are more likely to favor marijuana legaliza ti on, while Republicans are more likely to oppose marijuana legaliza ti on. We’d like to know your opinion. Do you favor or oppose marijuana legaliza ti on? Example: Party Cues
  5. The treatment effects are about 0.36 give or take 0.25

    or so. (combined with a batch of estimates for particular topics) These are really hard problems.
  6. Two Steps Enumerate the population of topics and take a

    random sample of about 25 to 50. Summarize the separate experiments using a hierarchical model. Step 2 Step 1
  7. In a single-topic study, we’d fi t the model yi

    = α + δTi + ϵi yi[j] = αj + δj Ti[j] + ϵi[j] Here, with a sample of topics, we want the model
  8. ( αj δj ) ∼ N ( μα μδ ),

    ( σ2 α ρσα σδ ρσα σδ σ2 δ ) yi[j] = αj + δj Ti[j] + ϵi[j] Here, with a sample of topics, we want the model
  9. # fit model with REML library(lme4) fit_reml <- lmer(y ~

    treatment + (1 + treatment | topic_id), data = sample) # fit model with Stan library(rstanarm) fit_stan <- stan_lmer(y ~ treatment + (1 + treatment | topic_id), data = sample)
  10. How Good Are Our Summaries? Quartet Typical SD Truth Estimate

    90% CI Truth Estimate 90% CI Heterogenous 0.36 0.38 [0.17, 0.42] 0.25 0.19 [0.11, 0.26] Homogenous 0.36 0.38 [0.34, 0.43] 0.05 0.04 [0.003, 0.09] Constant 0.36 0.38 [0.33, 0.42] 0.00 0.04 [0.004, 0.09] Two-Valued 0.36 0.31 [0.04, 0.57] 0.72 0.67 [0.51, 0.91]
  11. Important Things Use about 25 to 50 topics. Increase total

    number of respondents by about 20% to 50%. Thing 2 Thing 1
  12. The Two Papers Conceptual overview of topic sampling with detailed

    empirical application. Coming out in Political Behavior. Technical details focused on the estimators (bias, RMSE, coverage) and power calculations. Paper 2 Paper 1 http://www.carlislerainey.com/research/ http://www.carlislerainey.com/talk