On 3/18/2013 2:00 AM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm wrote:
On 03/17/2013 06:32 PM, Richard Fobes wrote:
...
My VoteFair site collects lots of data. [...]
...

Could we use the polling data to get some information about, say,
candidate variety? I think we could, at least to some extent. We could
ask something like "how many elections with more than 20 voters have no
CW?". I think you published stats like that once, but I don't remember
what the values were.

I have not published anything from this data. I'm not in the academic world so I don't have time to anonoymize (sp?) it, or do any special analysis.

Perhaps you could also ask the voters some time later if they were
satisfied with the choice. That kind of "later polling" could uncover
Burlington-type breakdowns if there were any. If they could rank the
options in retrospect, it would also be possible to determine whether
they would have been satisfied with, say, IRV; but I imagine that's too
much to ask.

Somewhat related: There is a website named IdolAnalytics.com that analyzes the correlation between American Idol polls and the actual TV-show results (who gets eliminated) and compares the results for different polls. Here is a quote about the VoteFair American Idol polls from last year:

“People complaining about your site's sampling are being ridiculous. Your site selected 20/30 bottom group contestants and 5/12 eliminated contestants correctly (excluding the finale). That's better than any other single index that I assessed, including Dialidol and Zabasearch. No poll is perfect. Your site clearly captures a significant part of the voting.”

Now I need to stop spending too much time in this forum and get back to supporting real-life voting. Alas, more people vote in the American Idol poll than the Presidential polls I've conducted, but that means more people are learning how voting should be done (without the blinding distractions of left-versus-right politics).

Richard Fobes

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