Culture, Statistics, and Society

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Sociology = Hedge Fund?

Some people have blamed hedge funds (whose managers can earn extraordinarily high returns) for contributing to the high level of economic inequality in the USA. And who invented the hedge fund? We can thank the sociologist Alfred Winslow Jones, Ph.D.
Posted by Ethan Fosse at 12/17/2009
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Newer Post Older Post Home

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (4)
    • ►  April (4)
  • ►  2013 (1)
    • ►  September (1)
  • ►  2012 (56)
    • ►  May (6)
    • ►  April (8)
    • ►  March (29)
    • ►  February (10)
    • ►  January (3)
  • ►  2011 (6)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  February (1)
  • ►  2010 (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ▼  2009 (18)
    • ▼  December (18)
      • R in the NYT
      • Top Ten Must-Have R Packages for Social Scientists
      • Multilevel and Longitudinal Modeling in Stata
      • Sociology = Hedge Fund?
      • A Quantitative Tour of the Social Sciences
      • Creating Summated Scales
      • Simpson's Paradox Strikes Again
      • The Relative Size of Things
      • Multiple Imputation with Deletion
      • The Paradox of Choice
      • Abandoned Sociology
      • LaTeX or MS Word?
      • Why You Have No Friends
      • The Language of Economists
      • A Neat Mathematical Trick
      • Do Social Networks Affect Health?
      • Economists > Political Scientists > Sociologists?
      • An Extraordinarily Useful Command

About Me

My photo
Ethan Fosse
Cambridge, MA, United States
I'm a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Harvard University and a Doctoral Fellow in Inequality and Social Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School. My research focuses on the quantitative analysis of culture. I have written about culture and politics, network analysis, and poverty. You can reach me at efosse@fas.harvard.edu.
View my complete profile

Topics

3-D Scatter Plot Anthropology Bar Graph Bayesian Beliefs Big Data Big Science Biplots Books Boston CERN Central Tendency Complex Complexity Conferences Conservatism Conservative Corporations Correlogram Counterfactuals Crime Culture Data Disciplines Economics Ethnography General Relativity Google Graphics Harvard Higher Education Historical Sociology Humor Ideas Inequality Information Theory Internet Knowledge Liberalism Literature MS Word Marxism Mathematical Sociology Mathematics Max Weber Memes Meritocracy Multilevel Models Music NYT Open Source Organizations Permutations Personality Physics Pi Political Ideology Political Science Politics Poverty Prediction Probability Programming Public Health Qualitative Quantitative Quantum Field Theory R Sampling Science Simulations Social Class Social Learning Social Mobility Social Networks Social Psychology Social Theory Society Sociology Statistics Surveys Technology Time Tocqueville Tufte Urban Values Videos Violin Plots Zipf's Law

Search This Blog

Popular Posts

  • Top 5 Unsolved Sociological Questions
    Physicists and other natural scientists often spend time specifying and focusing attention on unsolved questions, such as how particles obta...
  • 90+ Two-Minute Videos on R
    I highly recommend Anthony Damico's excellent two-minute videos on programming in R . You can find the full list of 90+ videos here . Th...
  • I've Converted to R Full-Time
    It's been over four years that I've been using both R and Stata, but as of last week I've become an R convert . For several year...
  • It's Official: Statistics is "Sexy"
    If you've seen the new Captain America movie, you might notice that statistics (and data mining more generally) are featured prominently...
  • 3-D Scatter Plots Redux
    One weakness of Stata versus R is the lack of 3-D graphing capabilities, in particular 3-D scatter plots. However, with some modifications, ...
  • 3-D Bar Graph "Masterpiece"
    I encountered this post on how to turn a "boring" bar graph into a 3-D "masterpiece." What's striking to me is that...
  • The Limits of Formal Theory in Sociology
    Sociologists and economists often disagree about the role of so-called "formal" theory in understanding social behavior. For the ...
  • Scatter Plot Matrix in R
    Stata has a large number of graphics capabilities (and I highly recommend Stata over other statistical packages for a variety of reasons), b...
  • Ternary (or Triaxial) Plots
    One rarely-used graphic is the ternary (or triaxial) plot , which is a very useful way of examining a tripartite decomposition of a variable...
  • The Troubled Future of Higher Education
    The political scientists Gary King and Maya Sen have just posted an excellent working paper clearly outlining the major problems facing h...

Recommended Blogs

  • Marginal Revolution
    Thursday assorted links
  • Information Is Beautiful
    Dataviz of the month Apr 2025
  • O'Reilly Radar - Insight, analysis, and research about emerging technologies.
    MCP: What It Is and Why It Matters—Part 1
  • scatterplot
    it’s the interface
  • Andrew Gelman's blog
    Reading the referee reports of that retracted paper by the science reformers: A peek behind the curtain
  • Leiter Reports: A Philosophy Blog
    "Realist Jurisprudence: Selected Essays"
  • Junk Charts
    Losing the plot while stacking up the bars
  • Revolutions
    Copilot for R
  • orgtheory.net
    I am now at Temple of Sociology, a new substack please check it out
  • Code and Culture
    Drop list elements if
  • Cultural Cognition Blog
    Weekend update: Tedx restored to youtube
  • Statistical Sage Blog
    The first few minutes matter: Intellectually engaging students
  • The Numbers Guy
    A Note to Readers
  • ThickCulture
    Is Trump Obsessive Tweeting an Addiction or a Strategy?
  • Seth Robert's blog
    Seth Roberts Community on Facebook
  • floatingsheep
    Floating Sheep in Comic Form
  • Permutations
    late blooming sociology?
  • Rense Corten
    11 ways to measure segregation in social networks
  • Social Science Statistics Blog
  • The Monkey Cage
For more information, please email me at efosse@fas.harvard.edu. Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.