Brexit poll -- "Wisdom of the crowd" theory Can we get a thousand responses?
#1
Posted 2016-May-24, 14:33
Please note, you are not being asked on what you would prefer (if you were eligible to vote). Please choose your option based on what you believe (or think, or estimate, or have researched) is the likelihood of a Brexit.
In the unlikely event that we get a 1000+ responses, I propose to estimate the "wisdom of the crowd" % as follows:
(Votes for #1)x0.95 + (V #2)x0.75 + (V #3)x0.60 + (V #4)x0.50 + (V #5)x0.40 + (V #6)x0.25 + (V #7)x0.05 divided by (Total Votes)
A sufficiently large sample can then be compared to %s indicated in (a) UK-based opinion polls, (b) Analyst research (Wealth management, Investment Banking etc), and © betting odds...
Comments and views welcome.
#2
Posted 2016-May-24, 14:46
George Carlin
#3
Posted 2016-May-24, 17:13
#4
Posted 2016-May-24, 18:19
gwnn, on 2016-May-24, 14:46, said:
Perhaps the Yellows or Admins can somehow get this survey up on BBO instead of BBF. If that happens, we may get many thousands.
As is obvious, I don't want to know who voted (i.e. anonymity works) -- I only want many many votes.
Diana, is this feasible via BBO?
#5
Posted 2016-May-25, 01:10
London UK
#6
Posted 2016-May-25, 01:15
shyams, on 2016-May-24, 18:19, said:
As is obvious, I don't want to know who voted (i.e. anonymity works) -- I only want many many votes.
Diana, is this feasible via BBO?
I don't think BBO was meant to be a survey site. Soon we'd have people asking help with their Bachelor's theses.
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2016-May-25, 08:37
gordontd, on 2016-May-25, 01:10, said:
LOL so did I.
#8
Posted 2016-May-27, 12:04
#9
Posted 2016-May-28, 02:17
#10
Posted 2016-May-28, 05:26
paulg, on 2016-May-28, 02:17, said:
By the way, Paul, the expected voting pattern in Scotland is incredibly skewed. I believe currently 2/3rd of Scottish residents want to vote to "Stay in the EU", which (for the SNP leadership) may be too high.
The ideal scenario for SNP is for Scotland to vote "Stay in the EU" by a small yet respectable margin (say 54-46) and hope England votes to "Leave the EU". This will almost certainly trigger a new independence referendum, which otherwise looks like a distant possibility.
... convoluted perhaps, but I thought the above idea has sound political merit to it.
#11
Posted 2016-May-28, 06:03
#12
Posted 2016-May-28, 06:14
Vampyr, on 2016-May-28, 06:03, said:
IMO, the markets are very poor at pricing politics. They got the last UK elections completely wrong, they mispriced Donald Trump (who was 8:1 odds for President 5 weeks ago), and they did not expect Front National to do so well in the first round of last French elections.
While I agree that Remain is the likely outcome, I disagree with the implied probability indicated by current market odds (which indicate a 81% chance that the UK will vote Remain).