tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6976144462093297473.post8210940423636518213..comments2024-03-26T19:10:00.791-04:00Comments on West Coast Stat Views (on Observational Epidemiology and more): The moment it became obvious that Nate Silver wasn't really listening to his criticsJosephhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10760453165301871031noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6976144462093297473.post-12955342722048417352014-04-10T11:33:41.199-04:002014-04-10T11:33:41.199-04:00Kaiser:
One might say that in this case the role ...Kaiser:<br /><br />One might say that in this case the role of the new 538 is not to raise the quality of data journalism by adding revolutionary new analyses, rather it would raise the quality of data journalism by increasing the supply, in two ways:<br /><br />(1) By paying people such as Emily Oster, Dan Hopkins, and Carl Bialik to do data journalism, you're get them to spend more of their time and effort on data journalism and less on research or teaching (in the case of Oster and Hopkins) or softer journalism (in the case of Bialik).<br /><br />(2) By paying people to work at 538, you're freeing up new slots for data journalism, for example now the WSJ will want to hire someone to replace Bialik, and we at the Monkey Cage will want to get someone to write the sorts of posts that Hopkins was writing for us. It's sort of like if Harvard went and hired a bunch of professors from Yale. Then Yale would have to replace the hires, etc etc. It's a trickle-up effect.<br /><br />As an economist, Krugman (and Tyler Cowen, another highly-visible critic of the new 538) should be well aware of these processes. That said, it seems like their criticism is more of specific pieces (in particular, some of 538's econ articles) and in this case their argument, I think, is that Nate is burning up some of 538's hard-won reputation. This could also be true. The new 538 could be a plus for data journalism in the aggregate even if some of its pieces are weak. As you say, at least they're better than Buzzfeed!Andrew Gelmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02715992780769751789noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6976144462093297473.post-55618572909887197342014-04-10T09:36:46.432-04:002014-04-10T09:36:46.432-04:00LIke Andrew, I also have been thinking about this,...LIke Andrew, I also have been thinking about this, and I come out on the side of Nate. Individually, the critique stands but taken together, they don't call for any coherent vision of how his critics would run an operation such as his. The level of rigor that Krugman and others demand requires years, perhaps decades, of research to write one piece; meanwhile, the other critique is the content is not timely. Think about the full-time journalists he has hired - there isn't a way to pay them enough to do the kind of pieces that are being imagined. As we all know, data collection, cleaning and analysis take a huge amount of time. It may be months of work to get one article out. Further, I'd like to judge them relative to competitors rather than in some kind of abstract universe. Compared to the Freakonomics blog, for example, 538 has a much better orientation. Compare to Huffington Post - when did HP have any real data journalism? Compare to Buzzfeed, don't even want to talk about it.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6976144462093297473.post-24740667056572055092014-04-09T10:56:23.589-04:002014-04-09T10:56:23.589-04:00Mark:
I've actually thought a lot about this....Mark:<br /><br />I've actually thought a lot about this. One issue is that social good might be maximized by Nate doing more analyses, but that's a lot of work for Nate! I imagine that one motivation of the new website, from Nate's perspective, is that he is not under the gun to produce a new analysis every day or two Producing a column ever few days (as Krugman does) or even every day (as I do on my blog) is not so much effort (for those of us who can write fluidly). Doing a new analysis every couple days is a huge amount of work, especially if your motivation is not internal but rather is an external need for content to fill a slot. From Nate's point of view, it's gotta be a lot more pleasant to have Dan Hopkins and Emily Oster do the work and for him to just relax a bit. I think Nate's earlier model, in which he produces original analyses on a regular basis, is not easily sustainable on his part.Andrew Gelmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02715992780769751789noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6976144462093297473.post-38435758328820590822014-04-09T06:45:15.080-04:002014-04-09T06:45:15.080-04:00Huffington Post may be a better analogy than Freak...Huffington Post may be a better analogy than Freakonomics and I probably should have said "collaborators and assistants."Markhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14705408455380402571noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6976144462093297473.post-7015648738909668752014-04-09T06:40:31.776-04:002014-04-09T06:40:31.776-04:00There are a few issues I've been chipping away...There are a few issues I've been chipping away at (a questionable business model, poor response to critics, a fundamental misreading of his own strengths -- the last in the upcoming hedgehog post), but I think the underlying question is do the incentives encourage someone like Silver to make the greatest contribution to the discourse and the science?<br /><br />Most of the new wave of critics (very much including Krugman) are complaining, not that the site is bad but that Silver is not making good use of his talents. The trouble is that this is one of those points where social good and standard career metrics deviate. The social good is best served Silver by hiring a bunch of assistants to maximize his productivity as a researcher and a writer, but revenue, traffic, fame and popular influence will be maximized by taking the Freakonomics path.Markhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14705408455380402571noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6976144462093297473.post-35424697396452980062014-04-09T04:50:43.669-04:002014-04-09T04:50:43.669-04:00Dan Hopkins is a good guy. He's posted on the...Dan Hopkins is a good guy. He's posted on the Monkey Cage too. I assume that 538 pays better (we pay close to zero) and will give him more exposure, at least in the short run. A few years ago I was posting on 538 for free, so it would seem to make even more sense for Dan to post there for a reasonable rate of pay.<br /><br />Regarding the site in general, the real point is that brand names aren't magic. Nate Silver is excellent, but slapping his name on a website doesn't automatically instill quality in the other contributions. It's not like a restaurant where you could imagine successful franchising with careful quality control, training, etc. It's more like one of these movies where they say "Steven Spielberg presents..." which means that Spielberg gave it his seal of approval but didn't really direct it. From that perspective, I think people's expectations of Nate's site were never realistic.<br /><br />Consider this: Nate is an unusually talented combination of analyst, writer, and entrepreneur. This is obvious: if Nate weren't unusually talented, we wouldn't have heard of him. But the flip side of this is that it's not like he can just snap his fingers and clone himself.<br /><br />To me, the most interesting thing Nate could do with his budget is not to hire Emily Oster or even Dan Hopkins to write independent pieces--ultimately, hiring someone to write you their own article is not much different from just linking to existing articles, e.g. Nate could just regularly link to the Monkey Cage, Marginal Revolution, and even Krugman (!) as approppriate--but rather if he were to hire people to collaborate with, both in the nitty gritty (for example, hiring some people who are experts on economic and political data who can find him the numbers he needs, right away) and in the interpretation (so that when Nate or his collaborators come up with an idea, they'll have someone to bounce it off of).<br /><br />I don't know how Nate is running his group. To the extent that the people writing the articles are working independently, I don't really see the point (except to supply a steady flow of content, which is fine, but it doesn't really speak to Nate's strengths as an analyst and writer). But if Nate is sitting in a room collaborating with people, that could make a difference.Andrew Gelmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02715992780769751789noreply@blogger.com