Courses:

Quantitative Research in Political Science and Public Policy >> Content Detail



Study Materials



Readings

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Required Texts

Amazon logo Snedecor, George W., and William G. Cochran. Statistical Methods. Ames, IA: Iowa State University Press, 1989. ISBN: 9780813815619.

Amazon logo Bulmer, M. G. Principles of Statistics. New York, NY: Dover Publications, 1979. ISBN: 9780486637600.

Amazon logo Chiang, Alpha C. Fundamental Methods of Mathematical Economics. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1984. ISBN: 9780070108134.

Recommended Texts

Amazon logo Goldberg, Samuel. Probability: An Introduction. New York, NY: Dover Publications, 1987. ISBN: 9780486652528.
(Discrete Probability)

Amazon logo Rice, John A. Mathematical Statistics and Data Analysis. Belmont, CA: Duxbury Press, 1994. ISBN: 9780534209346.
(Mathematical Statistics Course)

Examples of Mathematical Tools

The Cube Law

Edward R. Tufte. "The Relationship between Seats and Votes in Two-party Systems." The American Political Science Review 67, no. 2 (June, 1973): 540-554.

LEC #TOPICSREADINGS
Part 1: Introduction: Research Methods and Challenges
1Introduction
Part 2: Mathematical Tools

This section of the course reviews basic mathematical tools. You will also perform simple regression analyses using STATA® and we will use the functions that you estimate in the mathematics review.
2Functions and LimitsChiang. Chaps. 2 and 6
3DerivativesChiang. Chap. 7
4MaximizationChiang. Chap. 9
5Sums and IntegralsChiang. Chap. 13
Part 3: Probability and Models of Data

This section of the course develops the mathematical concepts used in statistics. Three ideas are essential: Random Variable, Density Functions, and Expectations.
6Random Variables, Populations and SamplesSnedecor and Cochran. Chap. 1
7Probability: Two Laws of Probability, Bayes Theorem
8Probability Functions: Binomial, Bernoulli, Poisson 
Uniform, Normal
9Expected Value: Mean, Variance, Covariance
10Sums of Random Variables and Limit Theorems, Law of Large Numbers, Central Limit TheoremAdditional Reading

Kendall and Stuart
Part 4: Statistical Methods

In this section of the course, we develop the three ideas of statistics using probability theory. These ideas are (1) data can be summarized with a probability function, (2) we can optimize that function to estimate unknown parameters of the population, and (3) our estimates are uncertain measures of the population parameters, but we can summarize that uncertainty succinctly.
11Data Model: Summary and Assumptions
12Estimation: MLE and MOM
13Inference: Confidence Interval and MSE
Part 5: Statistical Models

Conditional Distributions and Causality In this section, we apply the mathematical and statistical ideas develop to specific problems. The main idea in this section is that social scientific reasoning involves conditional statements of the form if X then Y. We focus on the tools for studying such relationships.
14Differences of Means
15Analysis of Frequencies and Variance
16Regression
17Regression (cont.)

 








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