As I understand is, this just means that you sum the squares of the SV and QV votes, then linearly scale all the votes of one such that these two numbers are equal to one another.
… such that the average for each of these numbers are equal, yes. I think that the way you said it, you’d be upscaling whichever group had fewer voters, but I’m pretty sure you didn’t mean that.
Instant Runoff seems to be optimising for outcomes about which the majority have consensus, which isn’t something I care as much about in this situation. That said I don’t fully understand how it would change the results.
E Pluribus Hugo, and more generally, proportional representation, have nothing to do with Instant Runoff, so I’m not sure what you’re saying here.
The Hugos use EPH for nominating finalists, then IRV to choose winners from among those finalists. Those are entirely separate steps. I was talking about the former, which has no IRV involved. I apologize for being unclear.
… such that the average for each of these numbers are equal, yes. I think that the way you said it, you’d be upscaling whichever group had fewer voters, but I’m pretty sure you didn’t mean that.
E Pluribus Hugo, and more generally, proportional representation, have nothing to do with Instant Runoff, so I’m not sure what you’re saying here.
The second paragraph in the linked post says:
The Hugos use EPH for nominating finalists, then IRV to choose winners from among those finalists. Those are entirely separate steps. I was talking about the former, which has no IRV involved. I apologize for being unclear.