Dear workshop community,

We will convene for the Applied Statistics Workshop (Gov 3009) next week on Wednesday (9/19).

The speaker is Aaron Kaufman (Harvard PhD candidate; job market candidate) who will be presenting his paper "An Automated Method to Estimate Survey Question Bias" (paper link here).

Where: CGIS Knafel Building, Room K354 (see this link for directions).

When: Wednesday, September 19th at 12 noon - 1:30 pm.

Abstract: Many survey researchers are interested in gauging public support for government policy, but there is strong evidence that a question’s wording affects responses to it. I develop the first automated and scalable method to predict the magnitude and direction of the partisan bias a question’s wording may impose on survey responses, and show using a series of survey experiments that it outperforms public opinion scholars in predicting that bias. Using a novel data set of almost one million survey questions from 1997 to 2017, I then examine trends in partisan survey question biases over time. I find that while questions related to economic issues are relatively unbiased, questions related to Barack Obama become steadily more conservatively biased from 2008 to 2017. Questions related to abortion and immigration are generally conservative, while questions related to healthcare and education are consistently liberal. Substantively, my results suggest that measurements of American public opinion are systematically biased; I discuss the implications of this result for democratic representation. Methodologically, this paper opens up new opportunities for studying ideology from text, and for improving survey methodology and measurement in public opinion.

All are welcome! Lunch is provided!

Best,

Connor Jerzak
Applied Statistics Workshop -- Graduate Student Coordinator
An anonymous feedback form for the workshop can be found here at this link.