TY - JOUR
T1 - A set-theoretic approach to Bayesian process tracing
AU - Barrenechea, Rodrigo
AU - Mahoney, James
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2017
Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions
PY - 2019/8
Y1 - 2019/8
N2 - This article develops a set-theoretic approach to Bayes’s theorem and Bayesian process tracing. In the approach, hypothesis testing is the procedure whereby one updates beliefs by narrowing the range of states of the world that are regarded as possible, thus diminishing the domain in which the actual world can reside. By explicitly connecting Bayesian analysis to its set-theoretic foundations, the approach makes process tracing more intuitive and thus easier to apply for qualitative researchers. Moreover, the set-theoretic approach provides new tools for assessing both the consequentialness and expectedness of evidence when conducting process tracing. It also provides a new way to classify and interpret process-tracing tests, such as hoop tests and smoking gun tests, by viewing them as zones in a continuous space whose dimensions reflect the magnitude of changes in sets. The article shows that Bayesian process tracing and set-theoretic process tracing are not alternatives to each other but rather two sides of the same coin.
AB - This article develops a set-theoretic approach to Bayes’s theorem and Bayesian process tracing. In the approach, hypothesis testing is the procedure whereby one updates beliefs by narrowing the range of states of the world that are regarded as possible, thus diminishing the domain in which the actual world can reside. By explicitly connecting Bayesian analysis to its set-theoretic foundations, the approach makes process tracing more intuitive and thus easier to apply for qualitative researchers. Moreover, the set-theoretic approach provides new tools for assessing both the consequentialness and expectedness of evidence when conducting process tracing. It also provides a new way to classify and interpret process-tracing tests, such as hoop tests and smoking gun tests, by viewing them as zones in a continuous space whose dimensions reflect the magnitude of changes in sets. The article shows that Bayesian process tracing and set-theoretic process tracing are not alternatives to each other but rather two sides of the same coin.
KW - Bayesian analysis
KW - hypothesis testing
KW - possible worlds
KW - process tracing
KW - set theory
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85041332374
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/fdf44a87-4030-35f9-83f3-31997f3b16cf/
U2 - 10.1177/0049124117701489
DO - 10.1177/0049124117701489
M3 - Article in a journal
SN - 0049-1241
VL - 48
SP - 451
EP - 484
JO - Sociological Methods and Research
JF - Sociological Methods and Research
IS - 3
ER -