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North Carolina

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octoberlib

(14,971 posts)
Wed Mar 11, 2015, 02:48 PM Mar 2015

Duke Mathematicians Investigate 2012 Election Results In North Carolina [View all]

Back in 2012, more North Carolinians voted for Democrats than Republicans in North Carolina’s Congressional elections. But Republicans ended up winning nine out of the state’s 13 seats that year. Those numbers piqued the interest of researchers at Duke, who decided to seek a mathematical explanation for the discrepancy. They recently published a study with their results.


"We share this hall with the physics department, physics starts somewhere right down there," Mattingly says. He opens the door to reveal an office that looks like it belongs to a math professor. There are books everywhere and a big chalkboard on one wall covered with half-erased equations. This is where Mattingly first got the idea to include one of his students, senior Christy Vaughn, in the mathematical conundrum of the 2012 U.S. Congressional Elections in North Carolina.

"One day I kinda had this idea that we should look at gerrymandering. And so I called her and I said I got an idea," says Mattingly. (Gerrymandering is the setting of electoral districts in an attempt to obtain political gain.)

"Right away I was very interested in this project because it’s just such a stark result that so few seats were awarded to Democrats when the popular vote was so different," chimes in Vaughn.

http://wunc.org/post/duke-mathematicians-investigate-2012-election-results-north-carolina

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