Why and how we’re weighting surveys for past presidential vote
This piece explains why, when and how we are weighting our surveys on Americans’ past vote.
A behind-the-scenes blog about research methods at Pew Research Center.
For our latest findings, visit pewresearch.org.
This piece explains why, when and how we are weighting our surveys on Americans’ past vote.
Building informative and digestible data visualizations is a foundational aspect of Pew Research Center’s work.
In our March 2021 survey, we decided to take a fresh look at the consent language we used when asking Americans to give us their Twitter handles.
Having a sample of adult Twitter users allows researchers to filter out bots, minors, institutional accounts and international users.
Our data science work typically involves multiple researchers working collaboratively on code.
PMI is a quick and easy way to identify words that distinguish one group of documents from another.
Pew Research Center recently sought to measure what U.S. adults know about geography, foreign leaders, institutions and other issues.
A look at current best practices in survey questionnaire translation and how Pew Research Center applies these approaches.
Pew Research Center recently sought to translate more than 11,000 open-ended survey responses into English.
After venturing into the world of computational social science in 2015, the Center needed to develop new tools and workflows.
The typology study examines U.S. politics through the prism of people’s values and attitudes, not just their party labels.
To search or browse all of Pew Research Center findings and data by topic, visit pewresearch.org