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Date: | Thu, 21 Jul 2011 17:30:58 -0400 |
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i had no hypothesis. was just surprised that the numbers were so close.
so i guess i should not feel that it was remarkable.
but just accept that i am an idiot who is easily amused.
either that or went bonkers long time ago.
thanks for the input.
a.
On 21 Jul 2011, at 17:26, Dan Krimm wrote:
> On Thu, July 21, 2011 12:44 pm, Avri Doria wrote:
>
>> (
>> personal aside, I find it remarkable that the
>> two ratios came out so close given proportional
>> voting based on organizational size or individual status -
> got to be amused by the little things in this job
>> or you will go completely bonkers!
>> )
>
>
> This sort of thing is my occupation these days (policy research,
> statistical analysis), so permit me to engage this tangent.
>
> What this indicates is that the probability of response (or non-response)
> is not correlated with (i.e., appears to be independent of) the vote-count
> per respondent. (I checked it per respondent type, and it is comparably
> close across types: large = 7/21 = 33.333%, small = 22/64 = 34.375%,
> individual = 55/166 = 33.133%)
>
> Why this should be remarkable or not is an open question. :-)
>
> Why would you hypothesize that they would be different? Did you think
> institutional members would be systematically different (on average) from
> individual members, in this regard? Do you have a theory of response that
> predicts this?
>
> Dan
>
>
> --
> Any opinions expressed in this message are those of the author alone and
> do not necessarily reflect any position of the author's employer.
>
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