A spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence

While political scientists have traditionally examined social influence through social network or contextual studies, this dissertation argues for the use of spatial econometrics as an alternative approach. While spatial econometrics is not new to political science, the dissertation attempts to broa...

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Main Author: Morgan, Dorothy Lam
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-12-5566
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2012-12-55662015-09-20T17:13:09ZA spatial econometric approach to the study of social influenceMorgan, Dorothy LamSpatial econometricsSocial influencePolitical methodologyWhile political scientists have traditionally examined social influence through social network or contextual studies, this dissertation argues for the use of spatial econometrics as an alternative approach. While spatial econometrics is not new to political science, the dissertation attempts to broaden its application by exploring spaces based on geography, demographic characteristics, and ideology. Social influence can be understood as a form of spatial interdependence among individuals in these spaces and can be analyzed as spatial autocorrelation. In the dissertation, I discuss the dimensions of the three spaces, what might account for mutual influence in these spaces, how to measure distances in these spaces, and how to use these distances for estimating social influence in models of political attitudes using ANES data. By taking a broader approach to space, I show that spatial econometrics can offer many advantages over more conventional approaches.text2013-01-30T15:46:48Z2013-01-30T15:46:48Z2012-122013-01-30December 20122013-01-30T15:46:58Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-12-55662152/ETD-UT-2012-12-5566eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Spatial econometrics
Social influence
Political methodology
spellingShingle Spatial econometrics
Social influence
Political methodology
Morgan, Dorothy Lam
A spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence
description While political scientists have traditionally examined social influence through social network or contextual studies, this dissertation argues for the use of spatial econometrics as an alternative approach. While spatial econometrics is not new to political science, the dissertation attempts to broaden its application by exploring spaces based on geography, demographic characteristics, and ideology. Social influence can be understood as a form of spatial interdependence among individuals in these spaces and can be analyzed as spatial autocorrelation. In the dissertation, I discuss the dimensions of the three spaces, what might account for mutual influence in these spaces, how to measure distances in these spaces, and how to use these distances for estimating social influence in models of political attitudes using ANES data. By taking a broader approach to space, I show that spatial econometrics can offer many advantages over more conventional approaches. === text
author Morgan, Dorothy Lam
author_facet Morgan, Dorothy Lam
author_sort Morgan, Dorothy Lam
title A spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence
title_short A spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence
title_full A spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence
title_fullStr A spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence
title_full_unstemmed A spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence
title_sort spatial econometric approach to the study of social influence
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2012-12-5566
work_keys_str_mv AT morgandorothylam aspatialeconometricapproachtothestudyofsocialinfluence
AT morgandorothylam spatialeconometricapproachtothestudyofsocialinfluence
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