Nate Silver's Blog, page 24

May 21, 2021

Politics Podcast: You Asked If Americans Believe In Aliens. We Answered.

By Galen Druke and Nate Silver and Galen Druke and Nate Silver   More: Apple Podcasts | ESPN App | RSS

In this installment of the FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast, we open up the mailbag to answer listener questions on polling, politics and anything else on people’s minds. Listeners were curious to know if Americans believe in aliens, which party benefits from a Midwest/South realignment and whether polling is different for “ranked choice voting” elections.

You can listen to the episode by clicking the “play” button in the audio player above or by downloading it in iTunes , the ESPN App or your favorite podcast platform. If you are new to podcasts, learn how to listen .

The FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast is recorded Mondays and Thursdays. Help new listeners discover the show by leaving us a rating and review on iTunes . Have a comment, question or suggestion for “good polling vs. bad polling”? Get in touch by email, on Twitter or in the comments.

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Published on May 21, 2021 10:29

How Do You Poll A ‘Ranked Choice Voting’ Election? And Other Questions.

In this installment of the FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast, Nate Silver and Galen Druke open the mailbag and answer listeners’ questions about politics, polling and more.

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Published on May 21, 2021 09:27

May 12, 2021

How Our WNBA Predictions Work

References

Basketball-Reference.com / Elo ratings / Monte Carlo simulations

The Details

We kind of love Elo ratings at FiveThirtyEight — we’ve used them to forecast the NFL, NBA and MLB and to cover various other sports and tournaments over the years. We created Elo ratings for the WNBA in 2020, tracking team strength back to the league’s founding in 1997, and we’re now using them to predict each game and the season as a whole. Here’s how they work.

Team Elo ratings

The Elo system, created by Hungarian-American physics professor and chess master Arpad Elo, is a way to rate competitors that can be tuned and customized endlessly to incorporate available data. We like using Elo ratings because they’re relatively straightforward to understand1 and can help make pretty effective and accurate statistical models.

In this system, each team gets a numerical Elo rating. (League average is 1500.) When two teams play each other, the winning team siphons rating points from the losing team. Think of Elo ratings as live team power ratings that represent a team’s quality at any given moment.

Game predictions

First, team Elo ratings are used to calculate win probabilities coming into each game. For a game between two teams (A and B), we calculate Team A’s probability of winning with this formula:

\begin{equation*}Pr(A) = \frac{1}{10^{\frac{-Elo Diff}{400}} + 1}\end{equation*}

ELODIFF is Team A’s pregame Elo rating minus Team B’s pregame Elo rating, along with some adjustments:

A home-court advantage adjustment adds 80 points to the home team. 84 Elo points are worth 3 WNBA points,2 so this is like saying a home team would be favored by 2 or 3 points if the two teams were otherwise even.A playoff adjustment that multiples the adjusted ELODIFF by 1.25 for playoff games, accounting for our finding that better teams tend to outperform underdogs by a wider margin in the playoffs than they do in the regular season.

After each game is played, the winning team gains some Elo points (while the losing team loses the same number of points) based on pregame win probabilities and the winning team’s margin of victory. A win by a big underdog results in a bigger exchange of points than a win by a favorite — and the larger the margin of victory, the larger the shift. We calculate exactly how much to shift team Elo ratings after each game with this formula:

shift = K * Margin of victory multiplier * Pregame favorite multiplier

K represents the K-factor, a fixed parameter that determines how quickly ratings should react to new game results. In essence, it represents how many Elo points a winning team would gain (and a losing team would lose) if there were no adjustments based on the margin of victory or which team was favored. The higher the K-factor, the more a team’s rating changes based on individual game results.

A K-factor that is too high causes jumpy ratings that overreact to recent games. A low K-factor takes too long to pick up on important changes in team quality, like injuries or roster moves. For the WNBA, we found that a K-factor of 28 hits the sweet spot between these two poles and gives us the most efficient adjustments to team ratings after each game.

Teams always gain Elo points after a win and drop Elo points after a loss — but they gain (or lose) more points in blowouts. Teams also get bigger Elo bumps for piling it on if they were expected to eke out a close win or to lose altogether.

We adjust for this with the margin-of-victory multiplier, calculated as follows for a given team:

Take the winning team’s margin of victory, add 3 points and then take the result to the power of 0.8.Divide the result by 7.5 + (.006 * ELODIFF), where ELODIFF represents the adjusted Elo rating difference between the teams (see calculation above). ELODIFF should be negative in games won by the underdog.Multiply the result by -1 if the team lost the game.

This formula will also account for diminishing returns — going from a 5-point win to a 10-point win will matter more than going from a 25-point win to a 30-point win.

Teams will also gain more points for winning a game they were expected to lose — and will drop more points for losing a game they were expected to win.

We adjust for this with the pregame-favorite multiplier, calculated as team_win – team_winprob for a given team, where:

team_win is a binary representing the results of the game — 1 if the team won the game and 0 if the team lost.team_winprob is the team’s pregame probability of winning (see calculation above).

We then compute each team’s postgame Elo rating by adding this shift to the winning team’s pregame Elo rating and subtracting it from the losing team’s pregame Elo rating. These new shifted postgame Elo ratings become the pregame Elo ratings for a team’s next game, which get adjusted again based on the results of that game, and on and on. This process is repeated for every game in a season, through the last game of the WNBA Finals.

Preseason ratings

When a new season starts, we can’t reset team ratings to league average, but we also can’t just take the last postgame Elo rating from the previous season — each season is its own unique competition, even for teams whose rosters didn’t change much over the offseason. So, team preseason Elo ratings come from their last postgame Elo rating from the previous season, plus some reversion to the league average of 1500.

For our WNBA forecast, teams retain half of their rating from the end of the previous season. For example, the Los Angeles Sparks ended the 2020 season with an Elo rating of 1550,3 so they start the 2021 season with an Elo rating of:

\begin{equation*}(1550 * 0.5) + (1500 * 0.5) = 1525\end{equation*}

From team ratings to forecast

Now that we have an Elo-based system that rates every teams’ quality and responds to their game results, we need to turn that into a forecast that takes the current state of the league and calculates each team’s probability of making the playoffs or winning the Finals. We implement Monte Carlo simulations for this, using randomness to simulate the rest of the regular season and playoffs thousands of times, keeping tabs on what happens in each simulation. As with our other sports forecasts, we run these simulations “hot,” meaning that a team’s rating doesn’t stay static — rather, it changes within each simulated season based on the results of every simulated game, including the bonus for playoff wins and blowouts.

We then calculate how often in these simulations each team reaches certain benchmarks, like winning the Finals, and how many games they win on average. So, when you see that a team has a 20 percent chance of making the playoffs in the forecast interactive, for example, that means it made the playoffs in 20 percent of the simulations we’ve run, each of which takes its current record and remaining schedule into account. After every WNBA game is played, we rerun all those simulations and update our interactive.

Model Creators

Ryan Best A visual journalist for FiveThirtyEight. @ryanabest

Jay Boice A computational journalist for FiveThirtyEight. @jayboice

Nate Silver The founder and editor in chief of FiveThirtyEight. @natesilver538

Version History

1.0 Forecast launched for the 2021 season. May 12, 2021

Related ArticlesIt’s Time To Give Basketball’s Other GOAT Her Due

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Published on May 12, 2021 03:00

May 11, 2021

If Liz Cheney Doesn’t Have A Home In The GOP, Who Does?

In this installment of the FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast, the crew plays a trivia game to figure out what role Republicans like Rep. Liz Cheney will have in the future of the party. They also break down Florida’s new voting law and talk about the GOP’s efforts to change the way Americans vote.

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Published on May 11, 2021 06:25

May 10, 2021

What Florida’s New Voting Law Signifies About The GOP’s Larger Motivations

What role do Liz Cheney-type Republicans have to play in the future of the party (if any)? And what does Florida’s new voting law tell us about the GOP’s efforts to change the way Americans vote, and its larger motivations?

By Micah Cohen, Alex Samuels, Nathaniel Rakich and Nate Silver, Micah Cohen, Alex Samuels, Nathaniel Rakich and Nate Silver, Micah Cohen, Alex Samuels, Nathaniel Rakich and Nate Silver and Micah Cohen, Alex Samuels, Nathaniel Rakich and Nate Silver   More: Apple Podcasts | ESPN App | RSS

You can listen to the episode by clicking the “play” button in the audio player above or by downloading it in iTunes , the ESPN App or your favorite podcast platform. If you are new to podcasts, learn how to listen .

The FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast is recorded Mondays and Thursdays. Help new listeners discover the show by leaving us a rating and review on iTunes . Have a comment, question or suggestion for “good polling vs. bad polling”? Get in touch by email, on Twitter or in the comments.

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Published on May 10, 2021 15:10

May 7, 2021

How Partisanship Has Made Some Liberals More Cautious About COVID-19

In this installment of the FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast, the crew discusses the role partisanship has played in Americans’ perceptions of risk and their behavior during the pandemic. Emma Green of The Atlantic joins to talk about her recent article, “The Liberals Who Can’t Quit Lockdown.”

[Related: How To Make Sure Your Kid Isn’t A Superspreader]

Watch: https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/video...

Watch: https://abcnews.go.com/fivethirtyeigh...

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Published on May 07, 2021 07:28

Politics Podcast: How Partisanship Explains Our Pandemic Behavior

By Galen Druke, Nate Silver and Maggie Koerth, Galen Druke, Nate Silver and Maggie Koerth and Galen Druke, Nate Silver and Maggie Koerth   More: Apple Podcasts | ESPN App | RSS

Since just about the beginning of the pandemic, partisanship has shaped Americans’ perceptions of risk and their behavior. Polls showed divisions over things like wearing masks and reopening businesses, and studies of mobile phone data confirmed that Republicans and Democrats were — to some extent — living their lives differently. In this installment of the FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast, the crew discusses the role partisanship has played in the country’s response to the pandemic and speaks with The Atlantic’s Emma Green about her recent article, “The Liberals Who Can’t Quit Lockdown.”

You can listen to the episode by clicking the “play” button in the audio player above or by downloading it in iTunes , the ESPN App or your favorite podcast platform. If you are new to podcasts, learn how to listen .

The FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast is recorded Mondays and Thursdays. Help new listeners discover the show by leaving us a rating and review on iTunes . Have a comment, question or suggestion for “good polling vs. bad polling”? Get in touch by email, on Twitter or in the comments.

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Published on May 07, 2021 04:31

April 26, 2021

A Majority Of Americans Think Climate Change Should Be A Political Priority

In this installment of the FiveThirtyEight Politics podcast, the crew looks at how the Johnson & Johnson vaccine pause affected the public’s opinion and willingness to be vaccinated. They also take stock of how Americans are thinking about climate change and government initiatives to stem carbon emissions after President Biden announced a goal of cutting U.S. emissions to half their 2005 levels by 2030.

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Published on April 26, 2021 17:04

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