Yee diagram: Difference between revisions

Placing C4ES interview of Ka-Ping Yee as a featured video
(Ka-Ping Yee deserves an article too.)
(Placing C4ES interview of Ka-Ping Yee as a featured video)
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== Production ==
{{Image frame|width=300|content=
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<youtube width="300" height="230">-4FXLQoLDBA</youtube>
|content=<youtube width="300" height="230">7btAd1HYvjU</youtube>
|caption=Video describing how Yee diagrams are created, then showing animated versions that model different sets of candidates, for [[FPTP]], [[IRV]], [[Score]], and [[STAR]], then their divergence from the ideal single-voter case.<ref name=":0" /><ref>Note that in these simulations, voters are assumed to normalize their ballots under Score and STAR voting, which is why Score has the "center-expansion" effect</ref>
|caption=[[Ka-Ping Yee]] at a 2021 event hosted by [[The Center for Election Science]]. In this video, Yee explains several of the diagrams named after Yee, and discusses a broad range of electoral-reform topics.
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Each candidate is assigned a color and shown as a point, and every other point in the space is colored according to which candidate would win under a given voting method, if the center of public opinion were at that point. Typically, this forms large ''win regions'' of the same color. In other words, the candidates stay fixed, while the collective opinions of the voters move to every point in the space, testing who would win in each case.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4FXLQoLDBA|title=Animated Voting Methods|last=Frohnmayer|first=Mark|date=Jun 16, 2017|website=YouTube|publisher=Equal Vote Coalition|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2020-04-06}}</ref>
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== Software ==
{{Image frame|width=300|content=
<youtube width="300" height="230">-4FXLQoLDBA</youtube>
|caption=VideoA video featuring [[Mark Frohnmayer]] describing how Yee diagrams are created, then showing animated versions that model different sets of candidates, for [[FPTP]], [[IRV]], [[Score]], and [[STAR]], then their divergence from the ideal single-voter case.<ref name=":0" /><ref>Note that in these simulations, voters are assumed to normalize their ballots under Score and STAR voting, which is why Score has the "center-expansion" effect</ref>
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* Warren D. Smith's [https://rangevoting.org/IEVS/IEVS.c IEVS]
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** Same as https://github.com/brianolson/election_simulator/blob/master/spacegraph.cpp ?
** or http://bolson.org/voting/sim_one_seat/dist/ ?
 
 
== References ==