I hypothesize that until you get your 100,000 results, that authors like 
Chaucer and Shakespeare will rise to the top because they are the ones we've 
all read; they're going to get more total votes because more people will have 
read them. 

Are you capturing the "losses" as well as the wins here? Can you tell the 
difference between "no one has read this book" and "this book is not as great"? 

How do you control for this?

Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric 
Lease Morgan
Sent: Thursday, November 04, 2010 11:29 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] how 'great' are the great books

On Nov 4, 2010, at 11:22 AM, McAulay, Elizabeth wrote:

>> http://bit.ly/bPQHIg 
> 
> i had a lot of fun playing with this survey. is it an infinite survey, though 
> -- no end to the questions?

Correct, it is an endless survey.  8-)  

BTW, Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Shakespeare's Macbeth are now #1 and #2.

-- 
Eric M.

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