4,794 research outputs found
Sociology and Classical Liberalism
We advocate the development of a classical-liberal character within professional sociology. The American Sociological Association (ASA) is taken as representative of professional sociology in the United States. We review the ASA’s activities and organizational statements, to show the association’s leftist character. Internal criticism is often very uneasy about leftist domination of the field. We present survey results establishing that, in voting and in policy views, the ASA membership is mostly left-wing and devoid of classical liberalism. We sketch some ideas showing that sociology needs classical liberalism, and classical liberalism needs sociology.sociology; American Sociological Association; ideology; policy views; classical liberalism
Effective Inference for Generative Neural Parsing
Generative neural models have recently achieved state-of-the-art results for
constituency parsing. However, without a feasible search procedure, their use
has so far been limited to reranking the output of external parsers in which
decoding is more tractable. We describe an alternative to the conventional
action-level beam search used for discriminative neural models that enables us
to decode directly in these generative models. We then show that by improving
our basic candidate selection strategy and using a coarse pruning function, we
can improve accuracy while exploring significantly less of the search space.
Applied to the model of Choe and Charniak (2016), our inference procedure
obtains 92.56 F1 on section 23 of the Penn Treebank, surpassing prior
state-of-the-art results for single-model systems.Comment: EMNLP 201
Sour Grapes: Unrestrained Bid Protest Litigation in Rhode Island - Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island v. Najarian
How Politically Diverse Are the Social Sciences and Humanities? Survey Evidence from Six Fields
In Spring 2003, a large-scale survey of American academics was conducted using academic association membership lists from six fields: Anthropology, Economics, History, Philosophy (political and legal), Political Science, and Sociology. This paper focuses on one question: To which political party have the candidates you’ve voted for in the past ten years mostly belonged? The question was answered by 96.4 percent of academic respondents. The results show that the faculty is heavily skewed towards voting Democratic. The most lopsided fields surveyed are Anthropology with a D to R ratio of 30.2 to 1, and Sociology with 28.0 to 1. The least lopsided is Economics with 3.0 to 1. After Economics, the least lopsided is Political Science with 6.7 to 1. The average of the six ratios by field is about 15 to 1. Our analysis and related research suggest that for the the social sciences and humanities overall, a “one-big-pool” ratio of 7 to 1 is a safe lower-bound estimate, and 8 to 1 or 9 to 1 are reasonable point estimates. Thus, the social sciences and humanities are dominated by Democrats. There is little ideological diversity. We discuss Stephen Balch’s “property rights” proposal to help remedy the situation.academia; diversity; Democratic; Republican; voting; political parties
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