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Full Description
Interpreting poll data as a prediction of election outcomes is a practice as old as the field, rooted in a fundamental misunderstanding of what poll data means.
By first understanding how polls work at a fundamental level, this book gives readers the ability to discern flaws in the current methods. Then, through specific political examples from both the United States and the United Kingdom, it is shown how polls famously derided as "wrong" were, in fact, accurate. While polls are not always accurate, the reasons we can and can't (rightly) call them "wrong" are explained in this book.
This book will equip readers with the tools to navigate the mismatch of expectations. It is not intended to replace more technical applications of statistics but is accessible to anyone interested in learning more about how poll data should be understood, compared to how it's currently misunderstood.
Contents
Preface 1. Public Consumption of Data: Some Historical Perspective 2. Polls 3. What Makes a Poll "Wrong" Part 1 4. Introducing: Ideal Polls 5. Throw it in the Average 6. What Makes a Poll "Wrong" Part 2 7. Introducing: Simultaneous Census, Present Polls, and Plan Polls 8. What's For Lunch? 9. The Fallacy of Margin (Spread) Analysis 10. The Fallacy of Proportion Analysis 11. Instrument Error: Weighted Results and Literal Weight 12. What's (actually) For Lunch? 13. Real Polls + Bad Math = Fake Errors 14. My Simultaneous Census 15. Introducing: Adjusted Poll Values 16. Compensating Errors and Poll Masking 17. Welcome to Mintucky 18. Mintucky Results 19. Mintucky Poll Error & Jacob Bernoulli 20. The Point Spread Problem 21. Remembering Nick Panagakis (1937-2018) 22. Finding the Base of Support 23. Trump-Clinton 2016 24. The Law of 50% + 1 25. The Clintons' Lessons 26. Trump-Clinton-3rd Party 2016 27. We* Don't Talk About Utah 28. Informing A Prediction 29. One Number Can Tell You A Lot 30. Don't Call It a "Rule" & How To Report Polls 31. UK Elections & Brexit 32. The Polls Weren't Wrong About Brexit 33. UK General Election Polls: Not Wrong Either 34. The Future, and "Try It"



