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Randomization and Inference

Last updated on February 13, 2012

Experiments have become an increasingly common tool for political science researchers over the last decade, particularly laboratory experiments performed on small convenience samples. We argue that the standard normal theory statistical paradigm used in political science fails to meet the needs of these experimenters and outline an alternative approach to statistical inference based on randomization of the treatment. The randomization inference approach not only provides direct estimation of the experimenter’s quantity of interest — the certainty of the causal inference about the observed units — but also helps to deal with other challenges of small samples. We offer an introduction to the logic of randomization inference, a brief overview of its technical details, and guidance for political science experimenters about making analytic choices within the randomization inference framework. Finally, we reanalyze data from two political science experiments using randomization tests to illustrate the inferential differences that choosing a randomization inference approach can make.

That’s the abstract of a forthcoming American Journal of Political Science article by Luke Keele, Corrine McConnaughy, and Ismail White.

That being said, I really can’t wait for summer to arrive so I can finally get through my “Documents to Read” folder.