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Survey Sampling

Current Sociology, 1998
Survey sampling is one of the most commonly used data collection methods for social scientists. We begin by describing the simplest method of survey sampling, called simple random sampling.
K. Imai
openaire   +2 more sources

Survey Sampling.

Social Forces, 1966
Linton C. Freeman, Leslie Kish
  +5 more sources

Sampled-data control systems with non-uniform sampling: A survey of methods and trends

Annual Reviews in Control, 2023
Xianming Zhang   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sample surveys

2000
Abstract An introductory course in sample survey methodology is often riddled with tedious repetitive algebraic calculation of cumulants, and their estimates, for different designs. While the designs tend to be similar. the calculations are typically repeated in their entirety, obscuring their common structure.
D F Andrews, J E Stafford
openaire   +1 more source

Survey Sampling

Technometrics, 1993
Eric R. Ziegel, A. Chaudhuri, H. Stenger
openaire   +2 more sources

Survey Sampling.

Journal of the American Statistical Association, 1969
Nathan Keyfitz, Leslie Kish
  +5 more sources

Biometrika Centenary: Sample surveys

Biometrika, 2001
Abstract Despite Karl Pearson’s stated aim that the ‘evolutionist has to become in the widest sense of the words a registrar-general for all forms of life’, the papers published in Biometrika on sample surveys have been mainly theoretical and do not start to appear until the 1940s.
openaire   +3 more sources

Sample Surveys: Nonprobability Sampling

2001
Nonprobability sampling describes any method for collecting survey data which does not utilize a full probability sampling design. Nonprobability samples are usually cheaper and easier to collect than probability samples. However, there are a number of drawbacks.
openaire   +1 more source

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