The following economic model predicts whether a voter will vote for an incumbent school board member:
INCUMBENT = 1+
2 MALE +
3 PARTY +
4
MARRIED +
5 KIDS
where INCUMBENT = 1 if the voter votes for them, 0 otherwise
MALE = 1 if the voter is a male
PARTY indicates the voter is registered with the same political party as the incumbent
MARRIED = 1 for married voters, 0 otherwise
KIDS is the number of school age kids living in the voter’s house.
If you hypothesize males and females might have a different willingness to vote for a candidate registered with a different political party, which variable should you add to the economic model to allow you to test the hypothesis?
a. MALE * PARTY
b. MALE * MARRIED
c. MARRIED * KIDS
d. MARRIED * PARTY
If we hypothesize males and females might have a different willingness to vote for a candidate registered with a different political party, following variable should we add to the economic model to allow us to test the hypothesis:
d. MARRIED * PARTY
The following economic model predicts whether a voter will vote for an incumbent school board member:...
The following economic model predicts whether a voter will vote for an incumbent school board member: NCUMBENT = 1 + 2MALE + 3PARTY + 4MARRIED + 5KIDS where INCUMBENT = 1if the voter votes for them, 0 otherwise, MALE = 1 if the voter is a male, PARTY indicates the voter is registered with the same political party as the incumbent, MARRIED = 1 for married voters, 0 otherwise, and KIDS is the number of school age kids living with...
The following economic model predicts whether a voter will vote for an incumbent school board member: NCUMBENT = 1 + 2MALE + 3PARTY + 4MARRIED + 5KIDS where INCUMBENT = 1if the voter votes for them, 0 otherwise, MALE = 1 if the voter is a male, PARTY indicates the voter is registered with the same political party as the incumbent, MARRIED = 1 for married voters, 0 otherwise, and KIDS is the number of school age kids living with...
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