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Hello I'm having a difficult time with the following questions.
Please Help
1.
A preference table helps to organize data for a variety of situations. Often it is used to help organize the preferred choice of those that are surveyed. The data below references a three-way race for a political office. Use the preference table to answer the following question:
Which candidate would be the winner by plurality?
First Choice
Michael
Jessica
Peter
Jessica
Second Choice
Peter
Peter
Jessica
Michael
Third Choice
Jessica
Michael
Michael
Peter
22
20
17
8
Question 1 options:
Peter
Michael
Jessica
No candidate won by plurality.
2 question
When analyzing a preference schedule, it is noted that there are six candidates. There was a total of 25 votes counted. According to the Borda count method, what is the total number of points awarded to the candidates?
Question 2 options:
625
525
900
25
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I'm having a difficult time figuring out this question. please explain the steps.
When analyzing a preference schedule, it is noted that there are six candidates. There was a total of 25 votes counted. According to the Borda count method, what is the total number of points awarded to the candidates?
Question 2 options:
625
525
900
25
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hi baldwine
Welcome to the forum.
I had not met these voting systems before so I used google.
According to http://croninmath.pbworks.com/w/file/fe … ethods.pdf
plurality means "the candidate with the most first-place votes is the winner"
There is a winner with question 1 and it is easy to see who it is.
I found a definition of border count on Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borda_count
If a candidate is placed first by a voter then that candidate scores 5 + 4 + 3 + 2 + 1 for that vote. There must be 25 candidates (not all different of course) who get that score so the total score must be 25 x (1+2+3+4+5) Unfortunately that doesn't correspond to any of the multi choice answers. Not sure where to go from here.
Do you have an alternative definition of borda counting?
1+2+3+4+5 must feature so I am now looking at dividing the possible answers by 15. Only two qualify. And one of these is correct if there are 35 not 25 voters. Any help?
Bob
Children are not defined by school ...........The Fonz
You cannot teach a man anything; you can only help him find it within himself..........Galileo Galilei
Sometimes I deliberately make mistakes, just to test you! …………….Bob
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I think with 6 candidates he counts from 6 to 1 in which case 525.
I do think baldwine could have made the questions clearer
Forced purity isn't pure.
Good and Evil are different for each person.
I chose 8 9 and 7 randomly.
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hi T897T
You may be right. I had not met this method of vote counting before and just used the Wiki example. If the scores as as you say it bumps up everyone's totals but doesn't affect the overall ranking of the vote count, so it would still work the same, and give the same winner.
Bob
Children are not defined by school ...........The Fonz
You cannot teach a man anything; you can only help him find it within himself..........Galileo Galilei
Sometimes I deliberately make mistakes, just to test you! …………….Bob
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