Question
A political polling company wants to use census data to collect information on voters in a city by neighborhood. Based on the types of information collected in the survey form, which of the following could be mapped using census data?
The number of voting-age residents per household
Option A,The number of voting-age residents per household
The political party affiliation of the average resident
Option B,The political party affiliation of the average resident
How residents voted in the last election
Option C,How residents voted in the last election
How voters might vote in the next national election
Option D,How voters might vote in the next national election
How voters stand on current issues
The number of voting-age residents per household
Option A,The number of voting-age residents per household
The political party affiliation of the average resident
Option B,The political party affiliation of the average resident
How residents voted in the last election
Option C,How residents voted in the last election
How voters might vote in the next national election
Option D,How voters might vote in the next national election
How voters stand on current issues
Answers
GPT-4o mini
Based on the types of information that can be derived from census data, the following options can be mapped:
- **Option A: The number of voting-age residents per household** - This can be derived from census data, which includes information about household composition and the age of residents.
The following options cannot typically be mapped using census data:
- **Option B: The political party affiliation of the average resident** - Census data does not include information on political party affiliation, as this is considered sensitive and personal data.
- **Option C: How residents voted in the last election** - Census data does not track individual voting behavior.
- **Option D: How voters might vote in the next national election** - This is speculative and cannot be determined from census data.
- **How voters stand on current issues** - This type of opinion data is not part of census data and would require survey-specific information.
In summary, only **Option A** can be mapped using census data.
- **Option A: The number of voting-age residents per household** - This can be derived from census data, which includes information about household composition and the age of residents.
The following options cannot typically be mapped using census data:
- **Option B: The political party affiliation of the average resident** - Census data does not include information on political party affiliation, as this is considered sensitive and personal data.
- **Option C: How residents voted in the last election** - Census data does not track individual voting behavior.
- **Option D: How voters might vote in the next national election** - This is speculative and cannot be determined from census data.
- **How voters stand on current issues** - This type of opinion data is not part of census data and would require survey-specific information.
In summary, only **Option A** can be mapped using census data.