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Latest Polls and Latest Odds


Lex

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Renton, the point is Survation, in failing accurately to tell the difference between SNP loyalists and floating voters via the recall, has already proved woefully wrong on actual current voting intention within Scotland in other polls, such as the European elections. They, specifically, over-estimated the levels of support of the SNP, suggesting that the people they have been getting through to identifying as 2011 SNP voters are likely to give an inaccurate reflection of broader voting intention. The reason for the up-weighting is because it restores the balance of voters so that it actually reflects a fair demographic of who voted what in 2011. This does not seem methodologically unreasonable.

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I really doubt that a company like YouGov would deliberately skew the polling results. They are a business, based on producing accurate public polls, and if they were to get the referendum result significantly wrong it would be damaging to them as a company.

Survation have responded here - http://survation.com/response-to-yesterdays-times-yougov-articles-and-yougovs-published-research-about-survations-scottish-independence-methodology/

In so much as all pollsters end up upweighting or downweighting their raw data to fit a demographic profile tha tthey've decided is most accurate, then all pollsters are guilty of skewing their results. The results are necessarily based on the asusmptions of those measuring them. In this case, YouGov are intorducing a seperate subsmaple and upweighting them to meet a pre-conceived target. this must introduce an error, if said subsample requires a dramatic upweighting, based on not haivng enough people in that subsample to make it representative of the broader community.

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I really doubt that a company like YouGov would deliberately skew the polling results. They are a business, based on producing accurate public polls, and if they were to get the referendum result significantly wrong it would be damaging to them as a company.

Survation have responded here - http://survation.com/response-to-yesterdays-times-yougov-articles-and-yougovs-published-research-about-survations-scottish-independence-methodology/

;)

Just keep telling yourself that.

You will be back in Kansas in no time.

:lol::lol::lol::lol:

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Renton, the point is Survation, in failing accurately to tell the difference between SNP loyalists and floating voters via the recall, has already proved woefully wrong on actual current voting intention within Scotland in other polls, such as the European elections. They, specifically, over-estimated the levels of support of the SNP, suggesting that the people they have been getting through to identifying as 2011 SNP voters are likely to give an inaccurate reflection of broader voting intention. The reason for the up-weighting is because it restores the balance of voters so that it actually reflects a fair demographic of who voted what in 2011. This does not seem methodologically unreasonable.

Polling is only accurate on larger turnouts. It's more than possible that the lower turnout contributed to the polling error seen. Just as a small polling set must introduce errors because they are not representative of the broader community, so a low turnout must do the same.

As for the upweighting, it's not an insanely stupid adjustment to make, I think - but it's not smart either. Again, if they have a low number of these passing nats in their sample and upweight them, then the result cannot be said to be representative of a broader sample, and you'd be introducing another - different error to the one you say survation is introducing via it's 2011 recalled vote.

as I said above, it's fine if you assume said group would be uniform in it's reasoning for switching from Labour to SNP and therefore the small number of folk in that subsmaple would not introduce an error (but why not Liberal to SNP switchers as well?) but that IS an unreasonable assumption to make.

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Polling is only accurate on larger turnouts. It's more than possible that the lower turnout contributed to the polling error seen. Just as a small polling set must introduce errors because they are not representative of the broader community, so a low turnout must do the same.

As for the upweighting, it's not an insanely stupid adjustment to make, I think - but it's not smart either. Again, if they have a low number of these passing nats in their sample and upweight them, then the result cannot be said to be representative of a broader sample, and you'd be introducing another - different error to the one you say survation is introducing via it's 2011 recalled vote.

as I said above, it's fine if you assume said group would be uniform in it's reasoning for switching from Labour to SNP and therefore the small number of folk in that subsmaple would not introduce an error (but why not Liberal to SNP switchers as well?) but that IS an unreasonable assumption to make.

Most of the polling evidence I've seen suggests that there has been much less switching from Lib to SNP than Lib to Lab.

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In so much as all pollsters end up upweighting or downweighting their raw data to fit a demographic profile tha tthey've decided is most accurate, then all pollsters are guilty of skewing their results. The results are necessarily based on the asusmptions of those measuring them. In this case, YouGov are intorducing a seperate subsmaple and upweighting them to meet a pre-conceived target. this must introduce an error, if said subsample requires a dramatic upweighting, based on not haivng enough people in that subsample to make it representative of the broader community.

I don't include weighting as 'skewing'. I meant I doubt that YouGov are trying to get certain results. Essentially there's a dispute about how to weight the results. I really don't think that YouGov are trying to reach certain results. We'll see in September who is right.

I studied this a bit at University but in nowhere enough depth to have an informed opinion. I do think that there's a risk weighting on the 2011 results, you'd have to imagine that that is the SNPs high water mark. However, you do get elections that see one electoral 'reality' replaced with another - 1983 and 1997 spring to mind. So it could be that between 2007 and 2011 the picture changed in terms of support for independence.

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I asked in the other thread but is there any polling on the voting intentions of English people in Scotland?

ETA: I found one. http://www.panelbase.com/media/polls/F4108w11ScottishSundayTimestables.pdf

Excluding Don't Knows that poll puts the split for Yes/No among English born voters 29%/71%, with Scottish born voters 51%/49% in favour.

Edited by ICTChris
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I asked in the other thread but is there any polling on the voting intentions of English people in Scotland?

ICM have definitely done a breakdown of this, think it was in the region 20-25% voting Yes.

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:lol: :lol: :lol:

No really. More Liberal voters have been switching to Labour than to the he SNP, but it has happened at the same time as a lot of Labour voters went SNP. The effect was to protect Labour against an even bigger net swing to the SNP in 2011.

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I really doubt that a company like YouGov would deliberately skew the polling results. They are a business, based on producing accurate public polls, and if they were to get the referendum result significantly wrong it would be damaging to them as a company.

Survation have responded here - http://survation.com/response-to-yesterdays-times-yougov-articles-and-yougovs-published-research-about-survations-scottish-independence-methodology/

So good that they were 9% out in 2011 ;)

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So good that they were 9% out in 2011 ;)

Whit?

YouGov were almost spot on with the constituency vote shortly before 2011 and were no worse than the other pollsters on the regional vote.

Actual result in 2011: SNP 45, Lab 32, Con 14, Lib 8

YouGov April 21st: SNP 45, Lab 32, Con 10, Lib 8

They also called the UK General on the exit poll to within 1 seat.

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Whit?

YouGov were almost spot on with the constituency vote shortly before 2011 and were no worse than the other pollsters on the regional vote.

Actual result in 2011: SNP 45, Lab 32, Con 14, Lib 8

YouGov April 21st: SNP 45, Lab 32, Con 10, Lib 8

They also called the UK General on the exit poll to within 1 seat.

April 21st wasn't YouGov's final poll though was it?

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