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by RivieraKid 2064 days ago
Well Gelman claims the opposite.
1 comments

No, what Gelman says is that he suspects that to compensate for the fat tails in 538's state distributions, they had to reduce the between-state correlations, to get a desired overall level of uncertainty.

This implies that correlations increase, rather than decrease, the overall level of uncertainty.

This is also easy to see from a basic probability perspective, using the concept of variance. For example, if you have two coin flips, with outcomes {-1, +1} chosen uniformly at random, then the sum has variance 2 if the flips are independent, but variance 4 if the flips are perfectly dependent.

No, here's what Gelman says:

> the lower the correlation between states, the more uncertainty you need for each individual state forecast to get a desired national uncertainty