If it was literally 2 we couldn’t do statistics, but say it was the same ratio but one we could do statistics on, e.g. 1000.000 vs 2000, I would say this research is valid. If it was just about citations it would be a problem, but what’s being polled there is opinions on interdisciplinary research, so it’s about attitude towards working with other disciplines in general.
If a higher percentage of (a quantitatively smaller number of) political scientists think working with other disciplines is better, whereas a lower percentage of (a quantitatively higher number of) economists think so, then even though there is (in absolute numbers) a higher quantity of economists who think that interdisciplinary research is better, we can still (comparatively) say that economists are more in favor of being insular than political scientists.
I ended up doing some of my own empirics here. See my comment below in response to David.
I am beginning to see what Linch is saying. The actual hard question here is—What is the appropriate counterfactual to EA? EA is more insular compared to what exactly? Bob says compare the state of Econ against the state of EA but is that fair? I wrote some more initial thoughts down in my Github repo along with some R/Python code.
I can’t believe my first instinct was to think about the comparison group. But I got there and better late than never!
Haha thanks! Honestly I think you contributed much more to the discussion than I did! No need to say “I am beginning to see what Linch is saying.” I think you were answering a different question!
If it was literally 2 we couldn’t do statistics, but say it was the same ratio but one we could do statistics on, e.g. 1000.000 vs 2000, I would say this research is valid. If it was just about citations it would be a problem, but what’s being polled there is opinions on interdisciplinary research, so it’s about attitude towards working with other disciplines in general.
If a higher percentage of (a quantitatively smaller number of) political scientists think working with other disciplines is better, whereas a lower percentage of (a quantitatively higher number of) economists think so, then even though there is (in absolute numbers) a higher quantity of economists who think that interdisciplinary research is better, we can still (comparatively) say that economists are more in favor of being insular than political scientists.
I agree about attitudes, I was referring to citations.
I ended up doing some of my own empirics here. See my comment below in response to David.
I am beginning to see what Linch is saying. The actual hard question here is—What is the appropriate counterfactual to EA? EA is more insular compared to what exactly? Bob says compare the state of Econ against the state of EA but is that fair? I wrote some more initial thoughts down in my Github repo along with some R/Python code.
I can’t believe my first instinct was to think about the comparison group. But I got there and better late than never!
Haha thanks! Honestly I think you contributed much more to the discussion than I did! No need to say “I am beginning to see what Linch is saying.” I think you were answering a different question!