Data used my research
- Data from the General Social Survey analyzed in Hirschl, Booth, Glenna and Green (2012), "Politics, religion, and society: Is the United States experiencing a period of religious-political polarization?", Review of European Studies 4(4) (Aug 3, 2012 Epub ahead of print). A description of the data can be found here.
- The sythetic_2fold and CPTAC_CD spectral count datasets analyzed in Booth, Eilertson, Olinares and Yu (2010), "A Bayesian mixture model for comparative spectral count data in shotgun proteomics", Molecular and Cellular Proteomics 10(8):M110.007203, are available here and here respectively. The Supplemental materials file is here.
- The details of the 2009 Cornell National Social Survey are described in the codebook. The complete survey data set is available here, and the subset of the data analyzed in Hirschl, Booth, Glenna and Green (2011), "Religion and Politics in America: An Empirical Test of Individualist versus Social Models" (under review), is available here. Results of the survey of students in DSOC1101 in spring 2010 which were discussed in the same paper are given here.
- Data from the General Social Survey analyzed in Hirschl, Booth and Glenna (2009), "The link between voter choice and religious identity in contemporary society: bringing classical theory back in", Social Science Quarterly 90(4):927-944. A description of the data can be found here.