Author:
Bowers Jake,Drake Katherine W.
Abstract
Nearly all hierarchical linear models presented to political science audiences are estimated using maximum likelihood under a repeated sampling interpretation of the results of hypothesis tests. Maximum likelihood estimators have excellent asymptotic properties but less than ideal small sample properties. Multilevel models common in political science have relatively large samples of units like individuals nested within relatively small samples of units like countries. Often these level-2 samples will be so small as to make inference about level-2 effects uninterpretable in the likelihood framework from which they were estimated. When analysts do not have enough data to make a compelling argument for repeated sampling based probabilistic inference, we show how visualization can be a useful way of allowing scientific progress to continue despite lack of fit between research design and asymptotic properties of maximum likelihood estimators.Somewhere along the line in the teaching of statistics in the social sciences, the importance of good judgment got lost amid the minutiae of null hypothesis testing. It is all right, indeed essential, to argue flexibly and in detail for a particular case when you use statistics. Data analysis should not be pointlessly formal. It should make an interesting claim; it should tell a story that an informed audience will care about, and it should do so by intelligent interpretation of appropriate evidence from empirical measurements or observations.—Abelson, 1995, p. 2With neither prior mathematical theory nor intensive prior investigation of the data, throwing half a dozen or more exogenous variables into a regression, probit, or novel maximum-likelihood estimator is pointless. No one knows how they are interrelated, and the high-dimensional parameter space will generate a shimmering pseudo-fit like a bright coat of paint on a boat's rotting hull.—Achen, 1999, p. 26
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Reference83 articles.
1. The largest two-party margin by which a contested Senate election was won in 2000 was 60 percentage points. 16We are aware of several additional complications and modifications that might be made to this model due to the clustering within states that arises from the general sampling design of the NES (Stoker and Bowers 2002a, 2002b) and specifics of the 2000 NES (Bowers and Ensley 2003). We set these concerns aside for this article since here the data play an illustrative role in the service of our discussion of methods.
2. See Gill (2002, chap. 10) and (Gelman et al. 2004, chap. 5) for accessible discussions of exchangeability in Bayesian data analysis. Regardless of the mode of inference, exchangeability is an important prerequisite for any use of a likelihood function.
3. Let's Practice What We Preach: Turning Tables into Graphs;Gelman;Statistical Computing and Graphics,2002
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