Introduction: information in ecological inference: an
introduction Gary King, Ori Rosen and Martin A. Tanner
Part I
1. Prior and likelihood choices in the analysis of ecological data
Jonathan C. Wakefield
2. Information in aggregate data David G. Steel, Eric J. Beh and
Raymond Lourenco Chambers
3. Using ecological inference for contextual research: when
aggregation bias is the solution as well as the problem D. Stephen
Voss
Part II
4. Extending King's ecological inference model to multiple
elections using Markov chain Monte Carlo Jeffry B. Lewis
5. Ecological regression and ecological inference Bernard Grofman
and Samuel Merrill
6. Using prior information to aid ecological inference: a Bayesian
approach J. Kevin Corder and Christina Wolbrecht
7. An information theoretic approach to ecological estimation and
inference George G. Judge, Douglas J. Miller and Wendy K. Tam
Cho
8. Ecological panel inference from repeated cross sections Rob
Eisinga, Ben Pelzer and Philip Hans B. F. Franses
Part III
9. Multi-party split-ticket voting estimation as an ecological
inference problem Kenneth R. Benoit, Michael Laver and Daniela
Giannetti
10. Ecological inference in the presence of temporal dependence
Kevin M. Quinn
11. A spatial view of the ecological inference problem Carol A.
Gotway and Linda J. Young
12. Places and relationships in ecological inference: uncovering
contextual effects through a geographically weighted autoregressive
model Ernesto Calvo and Marcelo Escolar
13. Ecological inference incorporating spatial dependence
Sebastien Haneuse and Jonathan C. Wakefield
Part IV
14. A common framework for ecological inference in epidemiology,
political science and sociology Ruth E. Salway and Jonathan C.
Wakefield
15. A structured comparison of the Goodman regression, the
truncated normal, and the binomial-beta hierarchical methods for
ecological inference Rogério Silva de Mattos and ?lvaro Veiga
16. A comparison of the numerical properties of ei methods Micah
Altman, Jeff Gill and Michael P. McDonald.
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