The Fundamentals of political science research / Paul M. Kellstedt, Guy D. Whitten SYSNO 6471786, přírůstkové číslo 7408 Seznam obrázků v dokumentu: Figure 1.4. What would you expect to see based on the theory of economic voting? Two hy-pothetical cases. (Incumbent-Party Percentage of Major Party Vote, One-Year Real Economic Growth Per Capita) Figure 1.6. What would you expect to see based on the theory of economic voting? Two hy-pothetical cases. (Incumbent-Party Percentage of Major Party Vote, Unemployment Percent-age) Figure 2.1. Presidential approval, 1995–2005. Figure 2.2. Military spending in 2005. Figure 2.3. Gross U.S. government debt as a percentage of GDP, 1960–2011. Figure 2.4. Women as a percentage of members of parliament, 2004. Figure 5.2. Polity IV score for Brazil. Figure 5.3. Polity IV score for the United States. Figure 5.4. Pie graph of religious identification, NES 2004. Figure 5.5. Bar graph of religious identification, NES 2004. Figure 5.7. Box-whisker plot of incumbent-party presidential vote percentage, 1876–2008. Figure 5.8. Histogram of incumbent-party presidential vote percentage, 1876–2008. Figure 5.9. Histograms of incumbent-party presidential vote percentage, 1876–2008, de-picted with 2 and then 10 blocks. Figure 5.10. Kernel density plot of incumbent-party presidential vote percentage, 1876–2008. Figure 6.1 The normal probability distribution. Figure 6.2. The 68–95–99 rule. Figure 6.3. Frequency distribution of 600 rolls of a die. Figure 7.1. Box-whisker plot of Government Duration for majority and minority govern-ments. Figure 7.2. Kernel density plot of Government Duration for majority and minority govern-ments. Figure 7.3. Scatter plot of change in GDP and incumbent-party vote share. Figure 7.4. Scatter plot of change in GDP and incumbent-party vote share with mean-delimited quadrants. Figure 8.1. Scatter plot of change in GDP and incumbent-party vote share. Figure 8.2. Three possible lines. Figure 8.3. OLS regression line through scatter plot with mean-delimited quadrants.¨ Figure 8.4. Stata results for two-variable regression model of VOTE =α +β .GROWTH. – 1 Figure 8.5. Venn diagram of variance and covariance for X and Y. Figure 9.1. Venn diagram in which X, Y, and Z are correlated. Figure 9.2. Venn diagram in which X and Z are correlated with Y, but not with each other. Figure 10.2. Regression lines from the model with a dummy variable for gender. Figure 10.3. Regression lines from the interactive model. Figure 10.4. Stata lvr2plot for the model presented in Table 10.7. Figure 10.5. OLS line with scatter plot for Florida 2000. Figure 10.6. Venn diagram with multicollinearity. Figure 11.1. Three different models of Bush vote. Figure 11.2. The growth of golf and the demise of marriage in the United States, 1947–2002. Figure 11.3. The growth of the U.S. economy and the decline of marriage, 1947–2002. Figure 11.4. First differences of the number of golf courses and percentage of married fami-lies, 1947–2002.