Littauer Center, 1805 Cambridge St, Hansen-Mason Room (3rd floor lounge)
This week's presenter: Matt Gentzkow, Stanford University
All interested faculty and students are invited to attend. Co-sponsored by FAS and IQSS, the Program on Political Economy (PE) supports research-related activities that integrate the study of economics and politics, whether by studying economic behavior in the political process or political behavior in the marketplace. In general, positive political economy is concerned with showing how observed differences among institutions affect political and economic outcomes in various social, economic, and political systems and how the... Read more about Program on Political Economy Seminar
Littauer Center, 1805 Cambridge St, Hansen-Mason Room (3rd floor lounge)
This week's presenter: Matt Gentzkow, Stanford University
All interested faculty and students are invited to attend. Co-sponsored by FAS and IQSS, the Program on Political Economy (PE) supports research-related activities that integrate the study of economics and politics, whether by studying economic behavior in the political process or political behavior in the marketplace. In general, positive political economy is concerned with showing how observed differences among institutions affect political and economic outcomes in various social, economic, and political systems and how the... Read more about Program on Political Economy Seminar
This workshop will introduce you to the Unix shell, a power tool that allows people to do complex things with just a few keystrokes, combine existing programs in new ways, and automate repetitive tasks. Visit http://bit.ly/iqss-shell for details and registration information (requires HarvardKey). Read more about Automating work with the Unix Shell
This workshop will introduce you to the Unix shell, a power tool that allows people to do complex things with just a few keystrokes, combine existing programs in new ways, and automate repetitive tasks. Visit http://bit.ly/iqss-shell for details and registration information (requires HarvardKey). Read more about Automating work with the Unix Shell
Repeats every week every Wednesday until Wed May 01 2019 except Wed Nov 21 2018, Wed Dec 26 2018, Wed Jan 02 2019, Wed Jan 09 2019, Wed Jan 16 2019, Wed Jan 23 2019, Wed Mar 20 2019.
Repeats every week every Wednesday until Wed Mar 11 2020 except Wed Dec 30 2015, Wed Dec 28 2016, Wed Dec 27 2017, Wed Dec 26 2018, Wed Dec 25 2019, Wed Jan 01 2020.
11:00am to 1:00pm
For any questions on how to share your data with Dataverse, contact: support@dataverse.org
Repeats every week every Friday until Fri May 31 2019 except Fri Nov 27 2015, Fri Dec 25 2015, Fri Jan 01 2016, Fri Nov 11 2016, Fri Nov 25 2016, Fri Dec 23 2016, Fri Dec 30 2016, Fri Nov 10 2017, Fri Nov 24 2017, Fri Dec 22 2017, Fri Dec 29 2017, Fri Nov 23 2018, Fri Jan 04 2019, Fri Jan 11 2019, Fri Jan 18 2019, Fri Jan 25 2019.
1:00pm to 4:00pm
Location:
CGIS Knafel K332
If you have questions about your publication research, how to do your analysis, or how come your code isn't working properly, you can stop by and talk to our Research Consultants for free, every Friday from 1pm-4pm in CGIS K332!
Speaker: Donald P. Green, Columbia Political Science The Working Group in Political Psychology and Behavior (WoGPoP) is an interdisciplinary forum for the presentation and discussion of current research that uses a psychological and empirical orientation to examine the micro-foundations of citizen and elite behavior. Our topics include but are not limited to identity, emotion, culture, beliefs, preferences (including public opinion and individual preferences), rationality, norms, cognition, group dynamics, ethnic politics, context effects, attribution, information, bargaining and trust. This... Read more about Working Group in Political Psychology and Behavior (WoGPoP)
Speaker: Donald P. Green, Columbia Political Science The Working Group in Political Psychology and Behavior (WoGPoP) is an interdisciplinary forum for the presentation and discussion of current research that uses a psychological and empirical orientation to examine the micro-foundations of citizen and elite behavior. Our topics include but are not limited to identity, emotion, culture, beliefs, preferences (including public opinion and individual preferences), rationality, norms, cognition, group dynamics, ethnic politics, context effects, attribution, information, bargaining and trust. This... Read more about Working Group in Political Psychology and Behavior (WoGPoP)
This hands-on introduction to Stata will teach you how to navigate Stata’s graphical user interface, import and manipulate data, and calculate descriptive statistics. Visit http://bit.ly/iqss-stata-intro for details and registration information (requires HarvardKey). Read more about Introduction to Stata