[EM] Distance measure--Are issue-position differences additive?
MIKE OSSIPOFF
nkklrp at hotmail.com
Thu Mar 31 22:54:52 PST 2005
Bart--
You wrote:
This doesn't seem possible for more than one dimension-- don't Merrill's
models show sincere Borda yeilding slightly higher SU than the CW in two
dimensions, and Approval higher than both when there are only three
candidates?
I reply:
I don't know; I'd have to check.
But it can be demonstrated that if distance is city-block distance, then the
CW always maximizes SU, and that if distance is Euclidean distance, then the
CW maximizes SU under the conditions I described, including when the
population density is a normal function about some center, in each
dimension.
Why does the CW maximize SU with city-block distance?
Say we start at the median point, the point that's at the voter-median in
each dimension.
(By "going away from" or "going toward", I mean increasing or decreasing
distance to).
Say we depart from that point in one of the issue-dimensions. Immediately
after departure, we're going away from more voters than we're going toward,
in that dimension. With city-block distance, if half of the voters are on
the +X side of the central point, and half on the -X side, and if we're on
the +X side, and going farther in the +X direction, we're going away from
every voter whose X co-ordinate is less than ours, at the same rate at which
we're going toward all the voters whose X co-ordinate is more than ours. So,
as soon as we've gone any distance in the +X direction, then, continuing in
that direction, we're going away from more voters than we're going toward,
because we've added some voters who are in the -X direction from us, because
we've passed the X co-ordinate of those voters.
That's true for any issue-dimension, and it's true for any position away
from the voter median point.
Excuse that hasty argument. But you see that it's true, that going away from
the voter-median point increases the summed distance to the voters.
On another day I"ll demonstrate the correctness of my claim about Euclidean
distance.
By the way, though, I've told why city-block distance is more meaningful in
spatial models.
I could add that von Neuman & Morgenstern spoke of using hypothetical
lotteries to put completely different things on a single common utility
scale.
That further strengthens the argument for city-block distance.
Also, even when Euclidean distance is used, doesn't the relative scale of
issue-distances in the various dimensions matter? If so, and if there's an
effort to make that right, then doesn't that mean relating the importance of
distances in the various issue-dimensions? And if that can be done, why not
just add them up? If the various issue-space distances are all just amounts
of the same quantity, disutility.
Again, these arguments are hasty, and probably not well-worded.
Mike Ossipoff
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