Knihobot

Elementy v kvantitativních a výpočetních metodách pro společenské vědy

Tato série poskytuje rychlé a praktické úvody do nejnovějších metod v oblasti společenských věd. Zaměřuje se na inovativní techniky, které ještě nemají rozsáhlejší zpracování, a nabízí tak čtenářům přístup k nejmodernějším poznatkům. Cílí na výzkumníky a postgraduální studenty, kteří chtějí rozšířit své metodologické dovednosti a držet krok s rychlým vývojem v oboru. Autoři představují metody s důrazem na jejich praktickou aplikaci.

Agent-Based Models of Polarization and Ethnocentrism
A Practical Introduction to Regression Discontinuity Designs
Agent-Based Models of Social Life
Twitter as Data

Doporučené pořadí čtení

  • Twitter presents an ideal combination of size, international reach, and data accessibility that make it a useful data source. Acquiring, cleaning, and analyzing these data, however, require new tools and processes. This Element introduces these methods and provides scripts and examples for downloading, processing, and analyzing Twitter data.

    Twitter as Data
  • Simple, elegant, and powerful, tools are available in user-friendly, free software to help design, build, and run models of social interactions, even on the most basic laptop. Focusing on a well-known model of housing segregation, this Element sets out the fundamentals of what is now known as 'agent based modeling'.

    Agent-Based Models of Social Life
  • An accessible and practical guide for the analysis and interpretation of regression discontinuity (RD) designs. The focus is on the canonical sharp RD setup that has the following features: (i) the score is continuously distributed and has only one dimension, (ii) there is only one cutoff, and (iii) compliance with the treatment assignment is perfect.

    A Practical Introduction to Regression Discontinuity Designs
  • In this Element we develop: stochastic models, which add a crucial element of uncertainty to human interaction; models of human interactions structured by social networks; and 'evolutionary' models in which agents using more effective decision rules are more likely to survive and prosper than others.

    Agent-Based Models of Polarization and Ethnocentrism