Profs. Sam Wang and Simon Levin perform research on aggregated decision-making through rule systems. This work includes research into electoral mechanisms including the voting rules, redistricting, and Electoral College. As part of these efforts, they are recruiting a Computational Research Analyst. The Computational Research Analyst will develop computational analysis of redistricting and voting rules, toward the goal of performing analytics and scholarship relevant to identifying the performance characteristics and inefficiencies of complex U.S. election systems. A main focus is translating the dimensionality of aggregated cognitive approaches of large populations of voters to their ballots, with the goal of going from modeling all the way to practical interpretability. The work will be made publicly available through peer-reviewed scientific scholarship as well as databases that may be of use to a variety of audiences. The work will include dissemination and archival of codebooks, scripts, map content, and analytics. Other work includes the investigation of electoral rules such as ranked-choice voting and other modifications, with the goal of quantifying functional impacts. Translation to general audiences is part of the work and will produce content that is understandable to nontechnical readers (for example see one publication, the Princeton Gerrymandering Project). This comes in addition to other scholarship in scientific, statistical, and law journals. This position is suitable for someone with graduate or postgraduate level competence in one or more relevant subject areas, including computational simulation, model testing, and geospatial analysis. The term of this appointment is 1 year, with the possibility of renewal based upon satisfactory performance and funding.
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Job Type
Full-time
Career Level
Entry Level
Number of Employees
1,001-5,000 employees