![Marco M. Aviña Profile](https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1742750625023078400/STyOBRoo_x96.jpg)
Marco M. Aviña
@marcomavina
Followers
692
Following
25K
Statuses
121
PhDing @Harvard_GovDept; studying how/why identity politics mostly caters to affluent voters, not those it claims to represent | 🇲🇽🇨🇦🏳️🌈
Cambridge, MA
Joined March 2018
RT @jon_mellon: New WP with @VincentAB @ryancbriggs. We use LLMs and RAs to track publication trends in polisci. Here’s how subfields have…
0
29
0
RT @Nicolas_Ajz: Bueno, nos aceptaron "Discrimination in the Formation of Academic Networks: A Field Experiment on #EconTwitter" c/@PedroSa…
0
37
0
RT @marcomavina: 🚨Excited to share a revised version of our meta-reanalysis of conjoint experiments on immigration, featuring a new title!…
0
22
0
RT @PeejLoewen: Very good meta science, thanks to a lot of people doing a lot of studies and then a great team doing a huge reanalysis. Wor…
0
2
0
Mangione's surprisingly good poll numbers strike me as a great example of (highly politicized) survey respondents saying things they don't really mean to make a broader point. That is, they engage in expressive responding, which we shouldn't take very seriously.
A few years ago there was a poli sci debate about the level of public support for political violence. The Luigi Mangione stuff was a good real world test. It makes the Mason and Kalmoe estimates look pretty accurate.
0
0
2
RT @kareem_carr: According to a recent paper, the vast majority of academics gain their elite status the old-fashioned way, they were born…
0
1K
0
RT @victorckumar: Analytic philosopher here, starting to wonder if it’s less important to form correct moral opinions than it is to act mor…
0
14
0
RT @timgill924: Academics have an obsession with thinking of themselves as working class. Why? It is so freakin bizarre.
0
79
0
RT @ItaiYanai: The good idea comes when one person feels comfortable enough to say something that might make them look stupid and their fri…
0
432
0