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Sampling (statistics)

In statistics, quality assurance, and survey methodology, sampling is the selection of a subset or a statistical sample (termed sample for short) of individuals from within a statistical population to estimate characteristics of the whole population. Statisticians attempt to collect samples that are representative of the population. Sampling has lower costs and faster data collection compared to recording data from the entire population, and thus, it can provide insights in cases where it is infeasible to measure an entire population.

A visual representation of the sampling process

Each observation measures one or more properties (such as weight, location, colour or mass) of independent objects or individuals. In survey sampling, weights can be applied to the data to adjust for the sample design, particularly in stratified sampling.[1] Results from probability theory and statistical theory are employed to guide the practice. In business and medical research, sampling is widely used for gathering information about a population.[2] Acceptance sampling is used to determine if a production lot of material meets the governing specifications.

Population definition edit

Successful statistical practice is based on focused problem definition. In sampling, this includes defining the "population" from which our sample is drawn. A population can be defined as including all people or items with the characteristics one wishes to understand. Because there is very rarely enough time or money to gather information from everyone or everything in a population, the goal becomes finding a representative sample (or subset) of that population.

Sometimes what defines a population is obvious. For example, a manufacturer needs to decide whether a batch of material from production is of high enough quality to be released to the customer or should be scrapped or reworked due to poor quality. In this case, the batch is the population.

Although the population of interest often consists of physical objects, sometimes it is necessary to sample over time, space, or some combination of these dimensions. For instance, an investigation of supermarket staffing could examine checkout line length at various times, or a study on endangered penguins might aim to understand their usage of various hunting grounds over time. For the time dimension, the focus may be on periods or discrete occasions.

In other cases, the examined 'population' may be even less tangible. For example, Joseph Jagger studied the behaviour of roulette wheels at a casino in Monte Carlo, and used this to identify a biased wheel. In this case, the 'population' Jagger wanted to investigate was the overall behaviour of the wheel (i.e. the probability distribution of its results over infinitely many trials), while his 'sample' was formed from observed results from that wheel. Similar considerations arise when taking repeated measurements of some physical characteristic such as the electrical conductivity of copper.

This situation often arises when seeking knowledge about the cause system of which the observed population is an outcome. In such cases, sampling theory may treat the observed population as a sample from a larger 'superpopulation'. For example, a researcher might study the success rate of a new 'quit smoking' program on a test group of 100 patients, in order to predict the effects of the program if it were made available nationwide. Here the superpopulation is "everybody in the country, given access to this treatment" – a group that does not yet exist since the program is not yet available to all.

The population from which the sample is drawn may not be the same as the population from which information is desired. Often there is a large but not complete overlap between these two groups due to frame issues etc. (see below). Sometimes they may be entirely separate – for instance, one might study rats in order to get a better understanding of human health, or one might study records from people born in 2008 in order to make predictions about people born in 2009.

Time spent in making the sampled population and population of concern precise is often well spent because it raises many issues, ambiguities, and questions that would otherwise have been overlooked at this stage.

Sampling frame edit

In the most straightforward case, such as the sampling of a batch of material from production (acceptance sampling by lots), it would be most desirable to identify and measure every single item in the population and to include any one of them in our sample. However, in the more general case this is not usually possible or practical. There is no way to identify all rats in the set of all rats. Where voting is not compulsory, there is no way to identify which people will vote at a forthcoming election (in advance of the election). These imprecise populations are not amenable to sampling in any of the ways below and to which we could apply statistical theory.

As a remedy, we seek a sampling frame which has the property that we can identify every single element and include any in our sample.[3][4][5][6] The most straightforward type of frame is a list of elements of the population (preferably the entire population) with appropriate contact information. For example, in an opinion poll, possible sampling frames include an electoral register and a telephone directory.

A probability sample is a sample in which every unit in the population has a chance (greater than zero) of being selected in the sample, and this probability can be accurately determined. The combination of these traits makes it possible to produce unbiased estimates of population totals, by weighting sampled units according to their probability of selection.

Example: We want to estimate the total income of adults living in a given street. We visit each household in that street, identify all adults living there, and randomly select one adult from each household. (For example, we can allocate each person a random number, generated from a uniform distribution between 0 and 1, and select the person with the highest number in each household). We then interview the selected person and find their income.

People living on their own are certain to be selected, so we simply add their income to our estimate of the total. But a person living in a household of two adults has only a one-in-two chance of selection. To reflect this, when we come to such a household, we would count the selected person's income twice towards the total. (The person who is selected from that household can be loosely viewed as also representing the person who isn't selected.)

In the above example, not everybody has the same probability of selection; what makes it a probability sample is the fact that each person's probability is known. When every element in the population does have the same probability of selection, this is known as an 'equal probability of selection' (EPS) design. Such designs are also referred to as 'self-weighting' because all sampled units are given the same weight.

Probability sampling includes: Simple Random Sampling, Systematic Sampling, Stratified Sampling, Probability Proportional to Size Sampling, and Cluster or Multistage Sampling. These various ways of probability sampling have two things in common:

  1. Every element has a known nonzero probability of being sampled and
  2. involves random selection at some point.

Nonprobability sampling edit

Nonprobability sampling is any sampling method where some elements of the population have no chance of selection (these are sometimes referred to as 'out of coverage'/'undercovered'), or where the probability of selection cannot be accurately determined. It involves the selection of elements based on assumptions regarding the population of interest, which forms the criteria for selection. Hence, because the selection of elements is nonrandom, nonprobability sampling does not allow the estimation of sampling errors. These conditions give rise to exclusion bias, placing limits on how much information a sample can provide about the population. Information about the relationship between sample and population is limited, making it difficult to extrapolate from the sample to the population.

Example: We visit every household in a given street, and interview the first person to answer the door. In any household with more than one occupant, this is a nonprobability sample, because some people are more likely to answer the door (e.g. an unemployed person who spends most of their time at home is more likely to answer than an employed housemate who might be at work when the interviewer calls) and it's not practical to calculate these probabilities.

Nonprobability sampling methods include convenience sampling, quota sampling, and purposive sampling. In addition, nonresponse effects may turn any probability design into a nonprobability design if the characteristics of nonresponse are not well understood, since nonresponse effectively modifies each element's probability of being sampled.

Sampling methods edit

Within any of the types of frames identified above, a variety of sampling methods can be employed individually or in combination. Factors commonly influencing the choice between these designs include:

  • Nature and quality of the frame
  • Availability of auxiliary information about units on the frame
  • Accuracy requirements, and the need to measure accuracy
  • Whether detailed analysis of the sample is expected
  • Cost/operational concerns

Simple random sampling edit

 
A visual representation of selecting a simple random sample

In a simple random sample (SRS) of a given size, all subsets of a sampling frame have an equal probability of being selected. Each element of the frame thus has an equal probability of selection: the frame is not subdivided or partitioned. Furthermore, any given pair of elements has the same chance of selection as any other such pair (and similarly for triples, and so on). This minimizes bias and simplifies analysis of results. In particular, the variance between individual results within the sample is a good indicator of variance in the overall population, which makes it relatively easy to estimate the accuracy of results.

Simple random sampling can be vulnerable to sampling error because the randomness of the selection may result in a sample that does not reflect the makeup of the population. For instance, a simple random sample of ten people from a given country will on average produce five men and five women, but any given trial is likely to over represent one sex and underrepresent the other. Systematic and stratified techniques attempt to overcome this problem by "using information about the population" to choose a more "representative" sample.

Also, simple random sampling can be cumbersome and tedious when sampling from a large target population. In some cases, investigators are interested in research questions specific to subgroups of the population. For example, researchers might be interested in examining whether cognitive ability as a predictor of job performance is equally applicable across racial groups. Simple random sampling cannot accommodate the needs of researchers in this situation, because it does not provide subsamples of the population, and other sampling strategies, such as stratified sampling, can be used instead.

Systematic sampling edit

 
A visual representation of selecting a random sample using the systematic sampling technique

Systematic sampling (also known as interval sampling) relies on arranging the study population according to some ordering scheme and then selecting elements at regular intervals through that ordered list. Systematic sampling involves a random start and then proceeds with the selection of every kth element from then onwards. In this case, k=(population size/sample size). It is important that the starting point is not automatically the first in the list, but is instead randomly chosen from within the first to the kth element in the list. A simple example would be to select every 10th name from the telephone directory (an 'every 10th' sample, also referred to as 'sampling with a skip of 10').

As long as the starting point is randomized, systematic sampling is a type of probability sampling. It is easy to implement and the stratification induced can make it efficient, if the variable by which the list is ordered is correlated with the variable of interest. 'Every 10th' sampling is especially useful for efficient sampling from databases.

For example, suppose we wish to sample people from a long street that starts in a poor area (house No. 1) and ends in an expensive district (house No. 1000). A simple random selection of addresses from this street could easily end up with too many from the high end and too few from the low end (or vice versa), leading to an unrepresentative sample. Selecting (e.g.) every 10th street number along the street ensures that the sample is spread evenly along the length of the street, representing all of these districts. (If we always start at house #1 and end at #991, the sample is slightly biased towards the low end; by randomly selecting the start between #1 and #10, this bias is eliminated.)

However, systematic sampling is especially vulnerable to periodicities in the list. If periodicity is present and the period is a multiple or factor of the interval used, the sample is especially likely to be unrepresentative of the overall population, making the scheme less accurate than simple random sampling.

For example, consider a street where the odd-numbered houses are all on the north (expensive) side of the road, and the even-numbered houses are all on the south (cheap) side. Under the sampling scheme given above, it is impossible to get a representative sample; either the houses sampled will all be from the odd-numbered, expensive side, or they will all be from the even-numbered, cheap side, unless the researcher has previous knowledge of this bias and avoids it by a using a skip which ensures jumping between the two sides (any odd-numbered skip).

Another drawback of systematic sampling is that even in scenarios where it is more accurate than SRS, its theoretical properties make it difficult to quantify that accuracy. (In the two examples of systematic sampling that are given above, much of the potential sampling error is due to variation between neighbouring houses – but because this method never selects two neighbouring houses, the sample will not give us any information on that variation.)

As described above, systematic sampling is an EPS method, because all elements have the same probability of selection (in the example given, one in ten). It is not 'simple random sampling' because different subsets of the same size have different selection probabilities – e.g. the set {4,14,24,...,994} has a one-in-ten probability of selection, but the set {4,13,24,34,...} has zero probability of selection.

Systematic sampling can also be adapted to a non-EPS approach; for an example, see discussion of PPS samples below.

Stratified sampling edit

 
A visual representation of selecting a random sample using the stratified sampling technique

When the population embraces a number of distinct categories, the frame can be organized by these categories into separate "strata." Each stratum is then sampled as an independent sub-population, out of which individual elements can be randomly selected.[3] The ratio of the size of this random selection (or sample) to the size of the population is called a sampling fraction.[7] There are several potential benefits to stratified sampling.[7]

First, dividing the population into distinct, independent strata can enable researchers to draw inferences about specific subgroups that may be lost in a more generalized random sample.

Second, utilizing a stratified sampling method can lead to more efficient statistical estimates (provided that strata are selected based upon relevance to the criterion in question, instead of availability of the samples). Even if a stratified sampling approach does not lead to increased statistical efficiency, such a tactic will not result in less efficiency than would simple random sampling, provided that each stratum is proportional to the group's size in the population.

Third, it is sometimes the case that data are more readily available for individual, pre-existing strata within a population than for the overall population; in such cases, using a stratified sampling approach may be more convenient than aggregating data across groups (though this may potentially be at odds with the previously noted importance of utilizing criterion-relevant strata).

Finally, since each stratum is treated as an independent population, different sampling approaches can be applied to different strata, potentially enabling researchers to use the approach best suited (or most cost-effective) for each identified subgroup within the population.

There are, however, some potential drawbacks to using stratified sampling. First, identifying strata and implementing such an approach can increase the cost and complexity of sample selection, as well as leading to increased complexity of population estimates. Second, when examining multiple criteria, stratifying variables may be related to some, but not to others, further complicating the design, and potentially reducing the utility of the strata. Finally, in some cases (such as designs with a large number of strata, or those with a specified minimum sample size per group), stratified sampling can potentially require a larger sample than would other methods (although in most cases, the required sample size would be no larger than would be required for simple random sampling).

A stratified sampling approach is most effective when three conditions are met
  1. Variability within strata are minimized
  2. Variability between strata are maximized
  3. The variables upon which the population is stratified are strongly correlated with the desired dependent variable.
Advantages over other sampling methods
  1. Focuses on important subpopulations and ignores irrelevant ones.
  2. Allows use of different sampling techniques for different subpopulations.
  3. Improves the accuracy/efficiency of estimation.
  4. Permits greater balancing of statistical power of tests of differences between strata by sampling equal numbers from strata varying widely in size.
Disadvantages
  1. Requires selection of relevant stratification variables which can be difficult.
  2. Is not useful when there are no homogeneous subgroups.
  3. Can be expensive to implement.
Poststratification

Stratification is sometimes introduced after the sampling phase in a process called "poststratification".[3] This approach is typically implemented due to a lack of prior knowledge of an appropriate stratifying variable or when the experimenter lacks the necessary information to create a stratifying variable during the sampling phase. Although the method is susceptible to the pitfalls of post hoc approaches, it can provide several benefits in the right situation. Implementation usually follows a simple random sample. In addition to allowing for stratification on an ancillary variable, poststratification can be used to implement weighting, which can improve the precision of a sample's estimates.[3]

Oversampling

Choice-based sampling is one of the stratified sampling strategies. In choice-based sampling,[8] the data are stratified on the target and a sample is taken from each stratum so that the rare target class will be more represented in the sample. The model is then built on this biased sample. The effects of the input variables on the target are often estimated with more precision with the choice-based sample even when a smaller overall sample size is taken, compared to a random sample. The results usually must be adjusted to correct for the oversampling.

Probability-proportional-to-size sampling edit

In some cases the sample designer has access to an "auxiliary variable" or "size measure", believed to be correlated to the variable of interest, for each element in the population. These data can be used to improve accuracy in sample design. One option is to use the auxiliary variable as a basis for stratification, as discussed above.

Another option is probability proportional to size ('PPS') sampling, in which the selection probability for each element is set to be proportional to its size measure, up to a maximum of 1. In a simple PPS design, these selection probabilities can then be used as the basis for Poisson sampling. However, this has the drawback of variable sample size, and different portions of the population may still be over- or under-represented due to chance variation in selections.

Systematic sampling theory can be used to create a probability proportionate to size sample. This is done by treating each count within the size variable as a single sampling unit. Samples are then identified by selecting at even intervals among these counts within the size variable. This method is sometimes called PPS-sequential or monetary unit sampling in the case of audits or forensic sampling.

Example: Suppose we have six schools with populations of 150, 180, 200, 220, 260, and 490 students respectively (total 1500 students), and we want to use student population as the basis for a PPS sample of size three. To do this, we could allocate the first school numbers 1 to 150, the second school 151 to 330 (= 150 + 180), the third school 331 to 530, and so on to the last school (1011 to 1500). We then generate a random start between 1 and 500 (equal to 1500/3) and count through the school populations by multiples of 500. If our random start was 137, we would select the schools which have been allocated numbers 137, 637, and 1137, i.e. the first, fourth, and sixth schools.

The PPS approach can improve accuracy for a given sample size by concentrating sample on large elements that have the greatest impact on population estimates. PPS sampling is commonly used for surveys of businesses, where element size varies greatly and auxiliary information is often available – for instance, a survey attempting to measure the number of guest-nights spent in hotels might use each hotel's number of rooms as an auxiliary variable. In some cases, an older measurement of the variable of interest can be used as an auxiliary variable when attempting to produce more current estimates.[9]

Cluster sampling edit

 
A visual representation of selecting a random sample using the cluster sampling technique

Sometimes it is more cost-effective to select respondents in groups ('clusters'). Sampling is often clustered by geography, or by time periods. (Nearly all samples are in some sense 'clustered' in time – although this is rarely taken into account in the analysis.) For instance, if surveying households within a city, we might choose to select 100 city blocks and then interview every household within the selected blocks.

Clustering can reduce travel and administrative costs. In the example above, an interviewer can make a single trip to visit several households in one block, rather than having to drive to a different block for each household.

It also means that one does not need a sampling frame listing all elements in the target population. Instead, clusters can be chosen from a cluster-level frame, with an element-level frame created only for the selected clusters. In the example above, the sample only requires a block-level city map for initial selections, and then a household-level map of the 100 selected blocks, rather than a household-level map of the whole city.

Cluster sampling (also known as clustered sampling) generally increases the variability of sample estimates above that of simple random sampling, depending on how the clusters differ between one another as compared to the within-cluster variation. For this reason, cluster sampling requires a larger sample than SRS to achieve the same level of accuracy – but cost savings from clustering might still make this a cheaper option.

Cluster sampling is commonly implemented as multistage sampling. This is a complex form of cluster sampling in which two or more levels of units are embedded one in the other. The first stage consists of constructing the clusters that will be used to sample from. In the second stage, a sample of primary units is randomly selected from each cluster (rather than using all units contained in all selected clusters). In following stages, in each of those selected clusters, additional samples of units are selected, and so on. All ultimate units (individuals, for instance) selected at the last step of this procedure are then surveyed. This technique, thus, is essentially the process of taking random subsamples of preceding random samples.

Multistage sampling can substantially reduce sampling costs, where the complete population list would need to be constructed (before other sampling methods could be applied). By eliminating the work involved in describing clusters that are not selected, multistage sampling can reduce the large costs associated with traditional cluster sampling.[9] However, each sample may not be a full representative of the whole population.

Quota sampling edit

In quota sampling, the population is first segmented into mutually exclusive sub-groups, just as in stratified sampling. Then judgement is used to select the subjects or units from each segment based on a specified proportion. For example, an interviewer may be told to sample 200 females and 300 males between the age of 45 and 60.

It is this second step which makes the technique one of non-probability sampling. In quota sampling the selection of the sample is non-random. For example, interviewers might be tempted to interview those who look most helpful. The problem is that these samples may be biased because not everyone gets a chance of selection. This random element is its greatest weakness and quota versus probability has been a matter of controversy for several years.

Minimax sampling edit

In imbalanced datasets, where the sampling ratio does not follow the population statistics, one can resample the dataset in a conservative manner called minimax sampling. The minimax sampling has its origin in Anderson minimax ratio whose value is proved to be 0.5: in a binary classification, the class-sample sizes should be chosen equally. This ratio can be proved to be minimax ratio only under the assumption of LDA classifier with Gaussian distributions. The notion of minimax sampling is recently developed for a general class of classification rules, called class-wise smart classifiers. In this case, the sampling ratio of classes is selected so that the worst case classifier error over all the possible population statistics for class prior probabilities, would be the best.[7]

Accidental sampling edit

Accidental sampling (sometimes known as grab, convenience or opportunity sampling) is a type of nonprobability sampling which involves the sample being drawn from that part of the population which is close to hand. That is, a population is selected because it is readily available and convenient. It may be through meeting the person or including a person in the sample when one meets them or chosen by finding them through technological means such as the internet or through phone. The researcher using such a sample cannot scientifically make generalizations about the total population from this sample because it would not be representative enough. For example, if the interviewer were to conduct such a survey at a shopping center early in the morning on a given day, the people that they could interview would be limited to those given there at that given time, which would not represent the views of other members of society in such an area, if the survey were to be conducted at different times of day and several times per week. This type of sampling is most useful for pilot testing. Several important considerations for researchers using convenience samples include:

  1. Are there controls within the research design or experiment which can serve to lessen the impact of a non-random convenience sample, thereby ensuring the results will be more representative of the population?
  2. Is there good reason to believe that a particular convenience sample would or should respond or behave differently than a random sample from the same population?
  3. Is the question being asked by the research one that can adequately be answered using a convenience sample?

In social science research, snowball sampling is a similar technique, where existing study subjects are used to recruit more subjects into the sample. Some variants of snowball sampling, such as respondent driven sampling, allow calculation of selection probabilities and are probability sampling methods under certain conditions.

Voluntary Sampling edit

The voluntary sampling method is a type of non-probability sampling. Volunteers choose to complete a survey.

Volunteers may be invited through advertisements in social media.[10] The target population for advertisements can be selected by characteristics like location, age, sex, income, occupation, education, or interests using tools provided by the social medium. The advertisement may include a message about the research and link to a survey. After following the link and completing the survey, the volunteer submits the data to be included in the sample population. This method can reach a global population but is limited by the campaign budget. Volunteers outside the invited population may also be included in the sample.

It is difficult to make generalizations from this sample because it may not represent the total population. Often, volunteers have a strong interest in the main topic of the survey.

Line-intercept sampling edit

Line-intercept sampling is a method of sampling elements in a region whereby an element is sampled if a chosen line segment, called a "transect", intersects the element.

Panel sampling edit

Panel sampling is the method of first selecting a group of participants through a random sampling method and then asking that group for (potentially the same) information several times over a period of time. Therefore, each participant is interviewed at two or more time points; each period of data collection is called a "wave". The method was developed by sociologist Paul Lazarsfeld in 1938 as a means of studying political campaigns.[11] This longitudinal sampling-method allows estimates of changes in the population, for example with regard to chronic illness to job stress to weekly food expenditures. Panel sampling can also be used to inform researchers about within-person health changes due to age or to help explain changes in continuous dependent variables such as spousal interaction.[12] There have been several proposed methods of analyzing panel data, including MANOVA, growth curves, and structural equation modeling with lagged effects.

Snowball sampling edit

Snowball sampling involves finding a small group of initial respondents and using them to recruit more respondents. It is particularly useful in cases where the population is hidden or difficult to enumerate.

Theoretical sampling edit

Theoretical sampling[13] occurs when samples are selected on the basis of the results of the data collected so far with a goal of developing a deeper understanding of the area or develop theories. Extreme or very specific cases might be selected in order to maximize the likelihood a phenomenon will actually be observable.

Replacement of selected units edit

Sampling schemes may be without replacement ('WOR' – no element can be selected more than once in the same sample) or with replacement ('WR' – an element may appear multiple times in the one sample). For example, if we catch fish, measure them, and immediately return them to the water before continuing with the sample, this is a WR design, because we might end up catching and measuring the same fish more than once. However, if we do not return the fish to the water or tag and release each fish after catching it, this becomes a WOR design.

Sample size determination edit

Formulas, tables, and power function charts are well known approaches to determine sample size.

Steps for using sample size tables:

  1. Postulate the effect size of interest, α, and β.
  2. Check sample size table[14]
    1. Select the table corresponding to the selected α
    2. Locate the row corresponding to the desired power
    3. Locate the column corresponding to the estimated effect size.
    4. The intersection of the column and row is the minimum sample size required.

Sampling and data collection edit

Good data collection involves:

  • Following the defined sampling process
  • Keeping the data in time order
  • Noting comments and other contextual events
  • Recording non-responses

Applications of sampling edit

Sampling enables the selection of right data points from within the larger data set to estimate the characteristics of the whole population. For example, there are about 600 million tweets produced every day. It is not necessary to look at all of them to determine the topics that are discussed during the day, nor is it necessary to look at all the tweets to determine the sentiment on each of the topics. A theoretical formulation for sampling Twitter data has been developed.[15]

In manufacturing different types of sensory data such as acoustics, vibration, pressure, current, voltage, and controller data are available at short time intervals. To predict down-time it may not be necessary to look at all the data but a sample may be sufficient.

Errors in sample surveys edit

Survey results are typically subject to some error. Total errors can be classified into sampling errors and non-sampling errors. The term "error" here includes systematic biases as well as random errors.

Sampling errors and biases edit

Sampling errors and biases are induced by the sample design. They include:

  1. Selection bias: When the true selection probabilities differ from those assumed in calculating the results.
  2. Random sampling error: Random variation in the results due to the elements in the sample being selected at random.

Non-sampling error edit

Non-sampling errors are other errors which can impact final survey estimates, caused by problems in data collection, processing, or sample design. Such errors may include:

  1. Over-coverage: inclusion of data from outside of the population
  2. Under-coverage: sampling frame does not include elements in the population.
  3. Measurement error: e.g. when respondents misunderstand a question, or find it difficult to answer
  4. Processing error: mistakes in data coding
  5. Non-response or Participation bias: failure to obtain complete data from all selected individuals

After sampling, a review should be held[by whom?] of the exact process followed in sampling, rather than that intended, in order to study any effects that any divergences might have on subsequent analysis.

A particular problem involves non-response. Two major types of non-response exist:[16][17]

  • unit nonresponse (lack of completion of any part of the survey)
  • item non-response (submission or participation in survey but failing to complete one or more components/questions of the survey)

In survey sampling, many of the individuals identified as part of the sample may be unwilling to participate, not have the time to participate (opportunity cost),[18] or survey administrators may not have been able to contact them. In this case, there is a risk of differences between respondents and nonrespondents, leading to biased estimates of population parameters. This is often addressed by improving survey design, offering incentives, and conducting follow-up studies which make a repeated attempt to contact the unresponsive and to characterize their similarities and differences with the rest of the frame.[19] The effects can also be mitigated by weighting the data (when population benchmarks are available) or by imputing data based on answers to other questions. Nonresponse is particularly a problem in internet sampling. Reasons for this problem may include improperly designed surveys,[17] over-surveying (or survey fatigue),[12][20][need quotation to verify] and the fact that potential participants may have multiple e-mail addresses, which they do not use anymore or do not check regularly.

Survey weights edit

In many situations the sample fraction may be varied by stratum and data will have to be weighted to correctly represent the population. Thus for example, a simple random sample of individuals in the United Kingdom might not include some in remote Scottish islands who would be inordinately expensive to sample. A cheaper method would be to use a stratified sample with urban and rural strata. The rural sample could be under-represented in the sample, but weighted up appropriately in the analysis to compensate.

More generally, data should usually be weighted if the sample design does not give each individual an equal chance of being selected. For instance, when households have equal selection probabilities but one person is interviewed from within each household, this gives people from large households a smaller chance of being interviewed. This can be accounted for using survey weights. Similarly, households with more than one telephone line have a greater chance of being selected in a random digit dialing sample, and weights can adjust for this.

Weights can also serve other purposes, such as helping to correct for non-response.

Methods of producing random samples edit

History edit

Random sampling by using lots is an old idea, mentioned several times in the Bible. In 1786 Pierre Simon Laplace estimated the population of France by using a sample, along with ratio estimator. He also computed probabilistic estimates of the error. These were not expressed as modern confidence intervals but as the sample size that would be needed to achieve a particular upper bound on the sampling error with probability 1000/1001. His estimates used Bayes' theorem with a uniform prior probability and assumed that his sample was random. Alexander Ivanovich Chuprov introduced sample surveys to Imperial Russia in the 1870s.[21]

In the US the 1936 Literary Digest prediction of a Republican win in the presidential election went badly awry, due to severe bias [1]. More than two million people responded to the study with their names obtained through magazine subscription lists and telephone directories. It was not appreciated that these lists were heavily biased towards Republicans and the resulting sample, though very large, was deeply flawed.[22][23]

Elections in Singapore have adopted this practice since the 2015 election, also known as the sample counts, whereas according to the Elections Department (ELD), their country's election commission, sample counts help reduce speculation and misinformation, while helping election officials to check against the election result for that electoral division. The reported sample counts yield a fairly accurate indicative result with a 95% confidence interval at a margin of error within 4-5%; ELD reminded the public that sample counts are separate from official results, and only the returning officer will declare the official results once vote counting is complete.[24][25]

See also edit

Notes edit

The textbook by Groves et alia provides an overview of survey methodology, including recent literature on questionnaire development (informed by cognitive psychology) :

  • Robert Groves, et alia. Survey methodology (2010 2nd ed. [2004]) ISBN 0-471-48348-6.

The other books focus on the statistical theory of survey sampling and require some knowledge of basic statistics, as discussed in the following textbooks:

The elementary book by Scheaffer et alia uses quadratic equations from high-school algebra:

  • Scheaffer, Richard L., William Mendenhal and R. Lyman Ott. Elementary survey sampling, Fifth Edition. Belmont: Duxbury Press, 1996.

More mathematical statistics is required for Lohr, for Särndal et alia, and for Cochran:[26]

The historically important books by Deming and Kish remain valuable for insights for social scientists (particularly about the U.S. census and the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan):

References edit

  1. ^ Lance, P.; Hattori, A. (2016). Sampling and Evaluation. Web: MEASURE Evaluation. pp. 6–8, 62–64.
  2. ^ Salant, Priscilla, I. Dillman, and A. Don. How to conduct your own survey. No. 300.723 S3. 1994.
  3. ^ a b c d Robert M. Groves; et al. (2009). Survey methodology. ISBN 978-0470465462.
  4. ^ Lohr, Sharon L. Sampling: Design and analysis.
  5. ^ Särndal, Carl-Erik; Swensson, Bengt; Wretman, Jan. Model Assisted Survey Sampling.
  6. ^ Scheaffer, Richard L.; William Mendenhal; R. Lyman Ott. (2006). Elementary survey sampling.
  7. ^ a b c Shahrokh Esfahani, Mohammad; Dougherty, Edward (2014). "Effect of separate sampling on classification accuracy". Bioinformatics. 30 (2): 242–250. doi:10.1093/bioinformatics/btt662. PMID 24257187.
  8. ^ Scott, A.J.; Wild, C.J. (1986). "Fitting logistic models under case-control or choice-based sampling". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B. 48 (2): 170–182. JSTOR 2345712.
  9. ^ a b
    • Lohr, Sharon L. Sampling: Design and Analysis.
    • Särndal, Carl-Erik; Swensson, Bengt; Wretman, Jan. Model Assisted Survey Sampling.
  10. ^ Ariyaratne, Buddhika (30 July 2017). "Voluntary Sampling Method combined with Social Media advertising". heal-info.blogspot.com. Health Informatics. Retrieved 18 December 2018.[unreliable source?]
  11. ^ Lazarsfeld, P., & Fiske, M. (1938). The" panel" as a new tool for measuring opinion. The Public Opinion Quarterly, 2(4), 596–612.
  12. ^ a b Groves, et alia. Survey Methodology
  13. ^ "Examples of sampling methods" (PDF).
  14. ^ Cohen, 1988
  15. ^ Deepan Palguna; Vikas Joshi; Venkatesan Chakaravarthy; Ravi Kothari; L. V. Subramaniam (2015). Analysis of Sampling Algorithms for Twitter. International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence.
  16. ^ Berinsky, A. J. (2008). "Survey non-response". In: W. Donsbach & M. W. Traugott (Eds.), The Sage handbook of public opinion research (pp. 309–321). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
  17. ^ a b Dillman, D. A., Eltinge, J. L., Groves, R. M., & Little, R. J. A. (2002). "Survey nonresponse in design, data collection, and analysis". In: R. M. Groves, D. A. Dillman, J. L. Eltinge, & R. J. A. Little (Eds.), Survey nonresponse (pp. 3–26). New York: John Wiley & Sons.
  18. ^ Dillman, D.A., Smyth, J.D., & Christian, L. M. (2009). Internet, mail, and mixed-mode surveys: The tailored design method. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
  19. ^ Vehovar, V., Batagelj, Z., Manfreda, K.L., & Zaletel, M. (2002). "Nonresponse in web surveys". In: R. M. Groves, D. A. Dillman, J. L. Eltinge, & R. J. A. Little (Eds.), Survey nonresponse (pp. 229–242). New York: John Wiley & Sons.
  20. ^ Porter; Whitcomb; Weitzer (2004). "Multiple surveys of students and survey fatigue". In Porter, Stephen R (ed.). Overcoming survey research problems. New directions for institutional research. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. pp. 63–74. ISBN 9780787974770. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  21. ^ Seneta, E. (1985). "A Sketch of the History of Survey Sampling in Russia". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (General). 148 (2): 118–125. doi:10.2307/2981944. JSTOR 2981944.
  22. ^ David S. Moore and George P. McCabe. "Introduction to the Practice of Statistics".
  23. ^ Freedman, David; Pisani, Robert; Purves, Roger. Statistics.
  24. ^ "SAMPLE COUNT - Elections Department Singapore" (PDF). Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  25. ^ Ho, Timothy (1 September 2023). "Presidential Election 2023: How Accurate Will The Sample Count Be Tonight?". DollarsAndSense.sg. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  26. ^ Cochran, William G. (1977-01-01). Sampling Techniques, 3rd Edition (3rd ed.). New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-16240-7.

Further reading edit

  • Singh, G N, Jaiswal, A. K., and Pandey A. K. (2021), Improved Imputation Methods for Missing Data in Two-Occasion Successive Sampling, Communications in Statistics: Theory and Methods. DOI:10.1080/03610926.2021.1944211
  • Chambers, R L, and Skinner, C J (editors) (2003), Analysis of Survey Data, Wiley, ISBN 0-471-89987-9
  • Deming, W. Edwards (1975) On probability as a basis for action, The American Statistician, 29(4), pp. 146–152.
  • Gy, P (2012) Sampling of Heterogeneous and Dynamic Material Systems: Theories of Heterogeneity, Sampling and Homogenizing, Elsevier Science, ISBN 978-0444556066
  • Korn, E.L., and Graubard, B.I. (1999) Analysis of Health Surveys, Wiley, ISBN 0-471-13773-1
  • Lucas, Samuel R. (2012). doi:10.1007%2Fs11135-012-9775-3 "Beyond the Existence Proof: Ontological Conditions, Epistemological Implications, and In-Depth Interview Research."], Quality & Quantity, doi:10.1007/s11135-012-9775-3.
  • Stuart, Alan (1962) Basic Ideas of Scientific Sampling, Hafner Publishing Company, New York[ISBN missing]
  • Smith, T. M. F. (1984). "Present Position and Potential Developments: Some Personal Views: Sample surveys". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A. 147 (The 150th Anniversary of the Royal Statistical Society, number 2): 208–221. doi:10.2307/2981677. JSTOR 2981677.
  • Smith, T. M. F. (1993). "Populations and Selection: Limitations of Statistics (Presidential address)". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A. 156 (2): 144–166. doi:10.2307/2982726. JSTOR 2982726. (Portrait of T. M. F. Smith on page 144)
  • Smith, T. M. F. (2001). "Centenary: Sample surveys". Biometrika. 88 (1): 167–243. doi:10.1093/biomet/88.1.167.
  • Smith, T. M. F. (2001). "Biometrika centenary: Sample surveys". In D. M. Titterington and D. R. Cox (ed.). Biometrika: One Hundred Years. Oxford University Press. pp. 165–194. ISBN 978-0-19-850993-6.
  • Whittle, P. (May 1954). "Optimum preventative sampling". Journal of the Operations Research Society of America. 2 (2): 197–203. doi:10.1287/opre.2.2.197. JSTOR 166605.

Standards edit

ISO edit

  • ISO 2859 series
  • ISO 3951 series

ASTM edit

  • ASTM E105 Standard Practice for Probability Sampling Of Materials
  • ASTM E122 Standard Practice for Calculating Sample Size to Estimate, With a Specified Tolerable Error, the Average for Characteristic of a Lot or Process
  • ASTM E141 Standard Practice for Acceptance of Evidence Based on the Results of Probability Sampling
  • ASTM E1402 Standard Terminology Relating to Sampling
  • ASTM E1994 Standard Practice for Use of Process Oriented AOQL and LTPD Sampling Plans
  • ASTM E2234 Standard Practice for Sampling a Stream of Product by Attributes Indexed by AQL

ANSI, ASQ edit

  • ANSI/ASQ Z1.4

U.S. federal and military standards edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Sampling (statistics) at Wikimedia Commons

sampling, statistics, other, uses, sampling, disambiguation, statistics, quality, assurance, survey, methodology, sampling, selection, subset, statistical, sample, termed, sample, short, individuals, from, within, statistical, population, estimate, characteris. For other uses see Sampling disambiguation In statistics quality assurance and survey methodology sampling is the selection of a subset or a statistical sample termed sample for short of individuals from within a statistical population to estimate characteristics of the whole population Statisticians attempt to collect samples that are representative of the population Sampling has lower costs and faster data collection compared to recording data from the entire population and thus it can provide insights in cases where it is infeasible to measure an entire population A visual representation of the sampling processEach observation measures one or more properties such as weight location colour or mass of independent objects or individuals In survey sampling weights can be applied to the data to adjust for the sample design particularly in stratified sampling 1 Results from probability theory and statistical theory are employed to guide the practice In business and medical research sampling is widely used for gathering information about a population 2 Acceptance sampling is used to determine if a production lot of material meets the governing specifications Contents 1 Population definition 2 Sampling frame 2 1 Nonprobability sampling 3 Sampling methods 3 1 Simple random sampling 3 2 Systematic sampling 3 3 Stratified sampling 3 4 Probability proportional to size sampling 3 5 Cluster sampling 3 6 Quota sampling 3 7 Minimax sampling 3 8 Accidental sampling 3 9 Voluntary Sampling 3 10 Line intercept sampling 3 11 Panel sampling 3 12 Snowball sampling 3 13 Theoretical sampling 4 Replacement of selected units 5 Sample size determination 6 Sampling and data collection 7 Applications of sampling 8 Errors in sample surveys 8 1 Sampling errors and biases 8 2 Non sampling error 9 Survey weights 10 Methods of producing random samples 11 History 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Further reading 16 Standards 16 1 ISO 16 2 ASTM 16 3 ANSI ASQ 16 4 U S federal and military standards 17 External linksPopulation definition editSuccessful statistical practice is based on focused problem definition In sampling this includes defining the population from which our sample is drawn A population can be defined as including all people or items with the characteristics one wishes to understand Because there is very rarely enough time or money to gather information from everyone or everything in a population the goal becomes finding a representative sample or subset of that population Sometimes what defines a population is obvious For example a manufacturer needs to decide whether a batch of material from production is of high enough quality to be released to the customer or should be scrapped or reworked due to poor quality In this case the batch is the population Although the population of interest often consists of physical objects sometimes it is necessary to sample over time space or some combination of these dimensions For instance an investigation of supermarket staffing could examine checkout line length at various times or a study on endangered penguins might aim to understand their usage of various hunting grounds over time For the time dimension the focus may be on periods or discrete occasions In other cases the examined population may be even less tangible For example Joseph Jagger studied the behaviour of roulette wheels at a casino in Monte Carlo and used this to identify a biased wheel In this case the population Jagger wanted to investigate was the overall behaviour of the wheel i e the probability distribution of its results over infinitely many trials while his sample was formed from observed results from that wheel Similar considerations arise when taking repeated measurements of some physical characteristic such as the electrical conductivity of copper This situation often arises when seeking knowledge about the cause system of which the observed population is an outcome In such cases sampling theory may treat the observed population as a sample from a larger superpopulation For example a researcher might study the success rate of a new quit smoking program on a test group of 100 patients in order to predict the effects of the program if it were made available nationwide Here the superpopulation is everybody in the country given access to this treatment a group that does not yet exist since the program is not yet available to all The population from which the sample is drawn may not be the same as the population from which information is desired Often there is a large but not complete overlap between these two groups due to frame issues etc see below Sometimes they may be entirely separate for instance one might study rats in order to get a better understanding of human health or one might study records from people born in 2008 in order to make predictions about people born in 2009 Time spent in making the sampled population and population of concern precise is often well spent because it raises many issues ambiguities and questions that would otherwise have been overlooked at this stage Sampling frame editMain article Sampling frame In the most straightforward case such as the sampling of a batch of material from production acceptance sampling by lots it would be most desirable to identify and measure every single item in the population and to include any one of them in our sample However in the more general case this is not usually possible or practical There is no way to identify all rats in the set of all rats Where voting is not compulsory there is no way to identify which people will vote at a forthcoming election in advance of the election These imprecise populations are not amenable to sampling in any of the ways below and to which we could apply statistical theory As a remedy we seek a sampling frame which has the property that we can identify every single element and include any in our sample 3 4 5 6 The most straightforward type of frame is a list of elements of the population preferably the entire population with appropriate contact information For example in an opinion poll possible sampling frames include an electoral register and a telephone directory A probability sample is a sample in which every unit in the population has a chance greater than zero of being selected in the sample and this probability can be accurately determined The combination of these traits makes it possible to produce unbiased estimates of population totals by weighting sampled units according to their probability of selection Example We want to estimate the total income of adults living in a given street We visit each household in that street identify all adults living there and randomly select one adult from each household For example we can allocate each person a random number generated from a uniform distribution between 0 and 1 and select the person with the highest number in each household We then interview the selected person and find their income People living on their own are certain to be selected so we simply add their income to our estimate of the total But a person living in a household of two adults has only a one in two chance of selection To reflect this when we come to such a household we would count the selected person s income twice towards the total The person whoisselected from that household can be loosely viewed as also representing the person whoisn tselected In the above example not everybody has the same probability of selection what makes it a probability sample is the fact that each person s probability is known When every element in the population does have the same probability of selection this is known as an equal probability of selection EPS design Such designs are also referred to as self weighting because all sampled units are given the same weight Probability sampling includes Simple Random Sampling Systematic Sampling Stratified Sampling Probability Proportional to Size Sampling and Cluster or Multistage Sampling These various ways of probability sampling have two things in common Every element has a known nonzero probability of being sampled and involves random selection at some point Nonprobability sampling edit Main article Nonprobability sampling Nonprobability sampling is any sampling method where some elements of the population have no chance of selection these are sometimes referred to as out of coverage undercovered or where the probability of selection cannot be accurately determined It involves the selection of elements based on assumptions regarding the population of interest which forms the criteria for selection Hence because the selection of elements is nonrandom nonprobability sampling does not allow the estimation of sampling errors These conditions give rise to exclusion bias placing limits on how much information a sample can provide about the population Information about the relationship between sample and population is limited making it difficult to extrapolate from the sample to the population Example We visit every household in a given street and interview the first person to answer the door In any household with more than one occupant this is a nonprobability sample because some people are more likely to answer the door e g an unemployed person who spends most of their time at home is more likely to answer than an employed housemate who might be at work when the interviewer calls and it s not practical to calculate these probabilities Nonprobability sampling methods include convenience sampling quota sampling and purposive sampling In addition nonresponse effects may turn any probability design into a nonprobability design if the characteristics of nonresponse are not well understood since nonresponse effectively modifies each element s probability of being sampled Sampling methods editWithin any of the types of frames identified above a variety of sampling methods can be employed individually or in combination Factors commonly influencing the choice between these designs include Nature and quality of the frame Availability of auxiliary information about units on the frame Accuracy requirements and the need to measure accuracy Whether detailed analysis of the sample is expected Cost operational concernsSimple random sampling edit Main article Simple random sampling nbsp A visual representation of selecting a simple random sampleIn a simple random sample SRS of a given size all subsets of a sampling frame have an equal probability of being selected Each element of the frame thus has an equal probability of selection the frame is not subdivided or partitioned Furthermore any given pair of elements has the same chance of selection as any other such pair and similarly for triples and so on This minimizes bias and simplifies analysis of results In particular the variance between individual results within the sample is a good indicator of variance in the overall population which makes it relatively easy to estimate the accuracy of results Simple random sampling can be vulnerable to sampling error because the randomness of the selection may result in a sample that does not reflect the makeup of the population For instance a simple random sample of ten people from a given country will on average produce five men and five women but any given trial is likely to over represent one sex and underrepresent the other Systematic and stratified techniques attempt to overcome this problem by using information about the population to choose a more representative sample Also simple random sampling can be cumbersome and tedious when sampling from a large target population In some cases investigators are interested in research questions specific to subgroups of the population For example researchers might be interested in examining whether cognitive ability as a predictor of job performance is equally applicable across racial groups Simple random sampling cannot accommodate the needs of researchers in this situation because it does not provide subsamples of the population and other sampling strategies such as stratified sampling can be used instead Systematic sampling edit Main article Systematic sampling nbsp A visual representation of selecting a random sample using the systematic sampling techniqueSystematic sampling also known as interval sampling relies on arranging the study population according to some ordering scheme and then selecting elements at regular intervals through that ordered list Systematic sampling involves a random start and then proceeds with the selection of every kth element from then onwards In this case k population size sample size It is important that the starting point is not automatically the first in the list but is instead randomly chosen from within the first to the kth element in the list A simple example would be to select every 10th name from the telephone directory an every 10th sample also referred to as sampling with a skip of 10 As long as the starting point is randomized systematic sampling is a type of probability sampling It is easy to implement and the stratification induced can make it efficient if the variable by which the list is ordered is correlated with the variable of interest Every 10th sampling is especially useful for efficient sampling from databases For example suppose we wish to sample people from a long street that starts in a poor area house No 1 and ends in an expensive district house No 1000 A simple random selection of addresses from this street could easily end up with too many from the high end and too few from the low end or vice versa leading to an unrepresentative sample Selecting e g every 10th street number along the street ensures that the sample is spread evenly along the length of the street representing all of these districts If we always start at house 1 and end at 991 the sample is slightly biased towards the low end by randomly selecting the start between 1 and 10 this bias is eliminated However systematic sampling is especially vulnerable to periodicities in the list If periodicity is present and the period is a multiple or factor of the interval used the sample is especially likely to be unrepresentative of the overall population making the scheme less accurate than simple random sampling For example consider a street where the odd numbered houses are all on the north expensive side of the road and the even numbered houses are all on the south cheap side Under the sampling scheme given above it is impossible to get a representative sample either the houses sampled will all be from the odd numbered expensive side or they will all be from the even numbered cheap side unless the researcher has previous knowledge of this bias and avoids it by a using a skip which ensures jumping between the two sides any odd numbered skip Another drawback of systematic sampling is that even in scenarios where it is more accurate than SRS its theoretical properties make it difficult to quantify that accuracy In the two examples of systematic sampling that are given above much of the potential sampling error is due to variation between neighbouring houses but because this method never selects two neighbouring houses the sample will not give us any information on that variation As described above systematic sampling is an EPS method because all elements have the same probability of selection in the example given one in ten It is not simple random sampling because different subsets of the same size have different selection probabilities e g the set 4 14 24 994 has a one in ten probability of selection but the set 4 13 24 34 has zero probability of selection Systematic sampling can also be adapted to a non EPS approach for an example see discussion of PPS samples below Stratified sampling edit Main article Stratified sampling nbsp A visual representation of selecting a random sample using the stratified sampling techniqueWhen the population embraces a number of distinct categories the frame can be organized by these categories into separate strata Each stratum is then sampled as an independent sub population out of which individual elements can be randomly selected 3 The ratio of the size of this random selection or sample to the size of the population is called a sampling fraction 7 There are several potential benefits to stratified sampling 7 First dividing the population into distinct independent strata can enable researchers to draw inferences about specific subgroups that may be lost in a more generalized random sample Second utilizing a stratified sampling method can lead to more efficient statistical estimates provided that strata are selected based upon relevance to the criterion in question instead of availability of the samples Even if a stratified sampling approach does not lead to increased statistical efficiency such a tactic will not result in less efficiency than would simple random sampling provided that each stratum is proportional to the group s size in the population Third it is sometimes the case that data are more readily available for individual pre existing strata within a population than for the overall population in such cases using a stratified sampling approach may be more convenient than aggregating data across groups though this may potentially be at odds with the previously noted importance of utilizing criterion relevant strata Finally since each stratum is treated as an independent population different sampling approaches can be applied to different strata potentially enabling researchers to use the approach best suited or most cost effective for each identified subgroup within the population There are however some potential drawbacks to using stratified sampling First identifying strata and implementing such an approach can increase the cost and complexity of sample selection as well as leading to increased complexity of population estimates Second when examining multiple criteria stratifying variables may be related to some but not to others further complicating the design and potentially reducing the utility of the strata Finally in some cases such as designs with a large number of strata or those with a specified minimum sample size per group stratified sampling can potentially require a larger sample than would other methods although in most cases the required sample size would be no larger than would be required for simple random sampling A stratified sampling approach is most effective when three conditions are metVariability within strata are minimized Variability between strata are maximized The variables upon which the population is stratified are strongly correlated with the desired dependent variable Advantages over other sampling methodsFocuses on important subpopulations and ignores irrelevant ones Allows use of different sampling techniques for different subpopulations Improves the accuracy efficiency of estimation Permits greater balancing of statistical power of tests of differences between strata by sampling equal numbers from strata varying widely in size DisadvantagesRequires selection of relevant stratification variables which can be difficult Is not useful when there are no homogeneous subgroups Can be expensive to implement PoststratificationStratification is sometimes introduced after the sampling phase in a process called poststratification 3 This approach is typically implemented due to a lack of prior knowledge of an appropriate stratifying variable or when the experimenter lacks the necessary information to create a stratifying variable during the sampling phase Although the method is susceptible to the pitfalls of post hoc approaches it can provide several benefits in the right situation Implementation usually follows a simple random sample In addition to allowing for stratification on an ancillary variable poststratification can be used to implement weighting which can improve the precision of a sample s estimates 3 OversamplingChoice based sampling is one of the stratified sampling strategies In choice based sampling 8 the data are stratified on the target and a sample is taken from each stratum so that the rare target class will be more represented in the sample The model is then built on this biased sample The effects of the input variables on the target are often estimated with more precision with the choice based sample even when a smaller overall sample size is taken compared to a random sample The results usually must be adjusted to correct for the oversampling Probability proportional to size sampling edit Main article Probability proportional to size sampling In some cases the sample designer has access to an auxiliary variable or size measure believed to be correlated to the variable of interest for each element in the population These data can be used to improve accuracy in sample design One option is to use the auxiliary variable as a basis for stratification as discussed above Another option is probability proportional to size PPS sampling in which the selection probability for each element is set to be proportional to its size measure up to a maximum of 1 In a simple PPS design these selection probabilities can then be used as the basis for Poisson sampling However this has the drawback of variable sample size and different portions of the population may still be over or under represented due to chance variation in selections Systematic sampling theory can be used to create a probability proportionate to size sample This is done by treating each count within the size variable as a single sampling unit Samples are then identified by selecting at even intervals among these counts within the size variable This method is sometimes called PPS sequential or monetary unit sampling in the case of audits or forensic sampling Example Suppose we have six schools with populations of 150 180 200 220 260 and 490 students respectively total 1500 students and we want to use student population as the basis for a PPS sample of size three To do this we could allocate the first school numbers 1 to 150 the second school 151 to 330 150 180 the third school 331 to 530 and so on to the last school 1011 to 1500 We then generate a random start between 1 and 500 equal to 1500 3 and count through the school populations by multiples of 500 If our random start was 137 we would select the schools which have been allocated numbers 137 637 and 1137 i e the first fourth and sixth schools The PPS approach can improve accuracy for a given sample size by concentrating sample on large elements that have the greatest impact on population estimates PPS sampling is commonly used for surveys of businesses where element size varies greatly and auxiliary information is often available for instance a survey attempting to measure the number of guest nights spent in hotels might use each hotel s number of rooms as an auxiliary variable In some cases an older measurement of the variable of interest can be used as an auxiliary variable when attempting to produce more current estimates 9 Cluster sampling edit nbsp A visual representation of selecting a random sample using the cluster sampling techniqueMain article Cluster sampling Sometimes it is more cost effective to select respondents in groups clusters Sampling is often clustered by geography or by time periods Nearly all samples are in some sense clustered in time although this is rarely taken into account in the analysis For instance if surveying households within a city we might choose to select 100 city blocks and then interview every household within the selected blocks Clustering can reduce travel and administrative costs In the example above an interviewer can make a single trip to visit several households in one block rather than having to drive to a different block for each household It also means that one does not need a sampling frame listing all elements in the target population Instead clusters can be chosen from a cluster level frame with an element level frame created only for the selected clusters In the example above the sample only requires a block level city map for initial selections and then a household level map of the 100 selected blocks rather than a household level map of the whole city Cluster sampling also known as clustered sampling generally increases the variability of sample estimates above that of simple random sampling depending on how the clusters differ between one another as compared to the within cluster variation For this reason cluster sampling requires a larger sample than SRS to achieve the same level of accuracy but cost savings from clustering might still make this a cheaper option Cluster sampling is commonly implemented as multistage sampling This is a complex form of cluster sampling in which two or more levels of units are embedded one in the other The first stage consists of constructing the clusters that will be used to sample from In the second stage a sample of primary units is randomly selected from each cluster rather than using all units contained in all selected clusters In following stages in each of those selected clusters additional samples of units are selected and so on All ultimate units individuals for instance selected at the last step of this procedure are then surveyed This technique thus is essentially the process of taking random subsamples of preceding random samples Multistage sampling can substantially reduce sampling costs where the complete population list would need to be constructed before other sampling methods could be applied By eliminating the work involved in describing clusters that are not selected multistage sampling can reduce the large costs associated with traditional cluster sampling 9 However each sample may not be a full representative of the whole population Quota sampling edit Main article Quota sampling In quota sampling the population is first segmented into mutually exclusive sub groups just as in stratified sampling Then judgement is used to select the subjects or units from each segment based on a specified proportion For example an interviewer may be told to sample 200 females and 300 males between the age of 45 and 60 It is this second step which makes the technique one of non probability sampling In quota sampling the selection of the sample is non random For example interviewers might be tempted to interview those who look most helpful The problem is that these samples may be biased because not everyone gets a chance of selection This random element is its greatest weakness and quota versus probability has been a matter of controversy for several years Minimax sampling edit In imbalanced datasets where the sampling ratio does not follow the population statistics one can resample the dataset in a conservative manner called minimax sampling The minimax sampling has its origin in Anderson minimax ratio whose value is proved to be 0 5 in a binary classification the class sample sizes should be chosen equally This ratio can be proved to be minimax ratio only under the assumption of LDA classifier with Gaussian distributions The notion of minimax sampling is recently developed for a general class of classification rules called class wise smart classifiers In this case the sampling ratio of classes is selected so that the worst case classifier error over all the possible population statistics for class prior probabilities would be the best 7 Accidental sampling edit Accidental sampling sometimes known as grab convenience or opportunity sampling is a type of nonprobability sampling which involves the sample being drawn from that part of the population which is close to hand That is a population is selected because it is readily available and convenient It may be through meeting the person or including a person in the sample when one meets them or chosen by finding them through technological means such as the internet or through phone The researcher using such a sample cannot scientifically make generalizations about the total population from this sample because it would not be representative enough For example if the interviewer were to conduct such a survey at a shopping center early in the morning on a given day the people that they could interview would be limited to those given there at that given time which would not represent the views of other members of society in such an area if the survey were to be conducted at different times of day and several times per week This type of sampling is most useful for pilot testing Several important considerations for researchers using convenience samples include Are there controls within the research design or experiment which can serve to lessen the impact of a non random convenience sample thereby ensuring the results will be more representative of the population Is there good reason to believe that a particular convenience sample would or should respond or behave differently than a random sample from the same population Is the question being asked by the research one that can adequately be answered using a convenience sample In social science research snowball sampling is a similar technique where existing study subjects are used to recruit more subjects into the sample Some variants of snowball sampling such as respondent driven sampling allow calculation of selection probabilities and are probability sampling methods under certain conditions Voluntary Sampling edit Further information Self selection bias The voluntary sampling method is a type of non probability sampling Volunteers choose to complete a survey Volunteers may be invited through advertisements in social media 10 The target population for advertisements can be selected by characteristics like location age sex income occupation education or interests using tools provided by the social medium The advertisement may include a message about the research and link to a survey After following the link and completing the survey the volunteer submits the data to be included in the sample population This method can reach a global population but is limited by the campaign budget Volunteers outside the invited population may also be included in the sample It is difficult to make generalizations from this sample because it may not represent the total population Often volunteers have a strong interest in the main topic of the survey Line intercept sampling edit Line intercept sampling is a method of sampling elements in a region whereby an element is sampled if a chosen line segment called a transect intersects the element Panel sampling edit Panel sampling is the method of first selecting a group of participants through a random sampling method and then asking that group for potentially the same information several times over a period of time Therefore each participant is interviewed at two or more time points each period of data collection is called a wave The method was developed by sociologist Paul Lazarsfeld in 1938 as a means of studying political campaigns 11 This longitudinal sampling method allows estimates of changes in the population for example with regard to chronic illness to job stress to weekly food expenditures Panel sampling can also be used to inform researchers about within person health changes due to age or to help explain changes in continuous dependent variables such as spousal interaction 12 There have been several proposed methods of analyzing panel data including MANOVA growth curves and structural equation modeling with lagged effects Snowball sampling edit Snowball sampling involves finding a small group of initial respondents and using them to recruit more respondents It is particularly useful in cases where the population is hidden or difficult to enumerate Theoretical sampling edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2015 Theoretical sampling 13 occurs when samples are selected on the basis of the results of the data collected so far with a goal of developing a deeper understanding of the area or develop theories Extreme or very specific cases might be selected in order to maximize the likelihood a phenomenon will actually be observable Replacement of selected units editSampling schemes may be without replacement WOR no element can be selected more than once in the same sample or with replacement WR an element may appear multiple times in the one sample For example if we catch fish measure them and immediately return them to the water before continuing with the sample this is a WR design because we might end up catching and measuring the same fish more than once However if we do not return the fish to the water or tag and release each fish after catching it this becomes a WOR design Sample size determination editMain article Sample size determination Formulas tables and power function charts are well known approaches to determine sample size Steps for using sample size tables Postulate the effect size of interest a and b Check sample size table 14 Select the table corresponding to the selected a Locate the row corresponding to the desired power Locate the column corresponding to the estimated effect size The intersection of the column and row is the minimum sample size required Sampling and data collection editGood data collection involves Following the defined sampling process Keeping the data in time order Noting comments and other contextual events Recording non responsesApplications of sampling editSampling enables the selection of right data points from within the larger data set to estimate the characteristics of the whole population For example there are about 600 million tweets produced every day It is not necessary to look at all of them to determine the topics that are discussed during the day nor is it necessary to look at all the tweets to determine the sentiment on each of the topics A theoretical formulation for sampling Twitter data has been developed 15 In manufacturing different types of sensory data such as acoustics vibration pressure current voltage and controller data are available at short time intervals To predict down time it may not be necessary to look at all the data but a sample may be sufficient Errors in sample surveys editMain article Sampling error Survey results are typically subject to some error Total errors can be classified into sampling errors and non sampling errors The term error here includes systematic biases as well as random errors Sampling errors and biases edit Sampling errors and biases are induced by the sample design They include Selection bias When the true selection probabilities differ from those assumed in calculating the results Random sampling error Random variation in the results due to the elements in the sample being selected at random Non sampling error edit Main article Non sampling error Non sampling errors are other errors which can impact final survey estimates caused by problems in data collection processing or sample design Such errors may include Over coverage inclusion of data from outside of the population Under coverage sampling frame does not include elements in the population Measurement error e g when respondents misunderstand a question or find it difficult to answer Processing error mistakes in data coding Non response or Participation bias failure to obtain complete data from all selected individualsAfter sampling a review should be held by whom of the exact process followed in sampling rather than that intended in order to study any effects that any divergences might have on subsequent analysis A particular problem involves non response Two major types of non response exist 16 17 unit nonresponse lack of completion of any part of the survey item non response submission or participation in survey but failing to complete one or more components questions of the survey In survey sampling many of the individuals identified as part of the sample may be unwilling to participate not have the time to participate opportunity cost 18 or survey administrators may not have been able to contact them In this case there is a risk of differences between respondents and nonrespondents leading to biased estimates of population parameters This is often addressed by improving survey design offering incentives and conducting follow up studies which make a repeated attempt to contact the unresponsive and to characterize their similarities and differences with the rest of the frame 19 The effects can also be mitigated by weighting the data when population benchmarks are available or by imputing data based on answers to other questions Nonresponse is particularly a problem in internet sampling Reasons for this problem may include improperly designed surveys 17 over surveying or survey fatigue 12 20 need quotation to verify and the fact that potential participants may have multiple e mail addresses which they do not use anymore or do not check regularly Survey weights editIn many situations the sample fraction may be varied by stratum and data will have to be weighted to correctly represent the population Thus for example a simple random sample of individuals in the United Kingdom might not include some in remote Scottish islands who would be inordinately expensive to sample A cheaper method would be to use a stratified sample with urban and rural strata The rural sample could be under represented in the sample but weighted up appropriately in the analysis to compensate More generally data should usually be weighted if the sample design does not give each individual an equal chance of being selected For instance when households have equal selection probabilities but one person is interviewed from within each household this gives people from large households a smaller chance of being interviewed This can be accounted for using survey weights Similarly households with more than one telephone line have a greater chance of being selected in a random digit dialing sample and weights can adjust for this Weights can also serve other purposes such as helping to correct for non response Methods of producing random samples editRandom number table Mathematical algorithms for pseudo random number generators Physical randomization devices such as coins playing cards or sophisticated devices such as ERNIEHistory editRandom sampling by using lots is an old idea mentioned several times in the Bible In 1786 Pierre Simon Laplace estimated the population of France by using a sample along with ratio estimator He also computed probabilistic estimates of the error These were not expressed as modern confidence intervals but as the sample size that would be needed to achieve a particular upper bound on the sampling error with probability 1000 1001 His estimates used Bayes theorem with a uniform prior probability and assumed that his sample was random Alexander Ivanovich Chuprov introduced sample surveys to Imperial Russia in the 1870s 21 In the US the 1936 Literary Digest prediction of a Republican win in the presidential election went badly awry due to severe bias 1 More than two million people responded to the study with their names obtained through magazine subscription lists and telephone directories It was not appreciated that these lists were heavily biased towards Republicans and the resulting sample though very large was deeply flawed 22 23 Elections in Singapore have adopted this practice since the 2015 election also known as the sample counts whereas according to the Elections Department ELD their country s election commission sample counts help reduce speculation and misinformation while helping election officials to check against the election result for that electoral division The reported sample counts yield a fairly accurate indicative result with a 95 confidence interval at a margin of error within 4 5 ELD reminded the public that sample counts are separate from official results and only the returning officer will declare the official results once vote counting is complete 24 25 See also edit nbsp Mathematics portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sampling statistics Data collection Design effect Estimation theory Gy s sampling theory German tank problem Horvitz Thompson estimator Official statistics Ratio estimator Replication statistics Random sampling mechanism Resampling statistics Pseudo random number sampling Sample size determination Sampling case studies Sampling bias Sampling distribution Sampling error Sortition Survey samplingNotes editThe textbook by Groves et alia provides an overview of survey methodology including recent literature on questionnaire development informed by cognitive psychology Robert Groves et alia Survey methodology 2010 2nd ed 2004 ISBN 0 471 48348 6 The other books focus on the statistical theory of survey sampling and require some knowledge of basic statistics as discussed in the following textbooks David S Moore and George P McCabe February 2005 Introduction to the practice of statistics 5th edition W H Freeman amp Company ISBN 0 7167 6282 X Freedman David Pisani Robert Purves Roger 2007 Statistics 4th ed New York Norton ISBN 978 0 393 92972 0 The elementary book by Scheaffer et alia uses quadratic equations from high school algebra Scheaffer Richard L William Mendenhal and R Lyman Ott Elementary survey sampling Fifth Edition Belmont Duxbury Press 1996 More mathematical statistics is required for Lohr for Sarndal et alia and for Cochran 26 Cochran William G 1977 Sampling techniques Third ed Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 16240 7 Lohr Sharon L 1999 Sampling Design and analysis Duxbury ISBN 978 0 534 35361 2 Sarndal Carl Erik Swensson Bengt Wretman Jan 1992 Model assisted survey sampling Springer Verlag ISBN 978 0 387 40620 6 The historically important books by Deming and Kish remain valuable for insights for social scientists particularly about the U S census and the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan Deming W Edwards 1966 Some Theory of Sampling Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 64684 8 OCLC 166526 Kish Leslie 1995 Survey Sampling Wiley ISBN 0 471 10949 5References edit Lance P Hattori A 2016 Sampling and Evaluation Web MEASURE Evaluation pp 6 8 62 64 Salant Priscilla I Dillman and A Don How to conduct your own survey No 300 723 S3 1994 a b c d Robert M Groves et al 2009 Survey methodology ISBN 978 0470465462 Lohr Sharon L Sampling Design and analysis Sarndal Carl Erik Swensson Bengt Wretman Jan Model Assisted Survey Sampling Scheaffer Richard L William Mendenhal R Lyman Ott 2006 Elementary survey sampling a b c Shahrokh Esfahani Mohammad Dougherty Edward 2014 Effect of separate sampling on classification accuracy Bioinformatics 30 2 242 250 doi 10 1093 bioinformatics btt662 PMID 24257187 Scott A J Wild C J 1986 Fitting logistic models under case control or choice based sampling Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B 48 2 170 182 JSTOR 2345712 a b Lohr Sharon L Sampling Design and Analysis Sarndal Carl Erik Swensson Bengt Wretman Jan Model Assisted Survey Sampling Ariyaratne Buddhika 30 July 2017 Voluntary Sampling Method combined with Social Media advertising heal info blogspot com Health Informatics Retrieved 18 December 2018 unreliable source Lazarsfeld P amp Fiske M 1938 The panel as a new tool for measuring opinion The Public Opinion Quarterly 2 4 596 612 a b Groves et alia Survey Methodology Examples of sampling methods PDF Cohen 1988 Deepan Palguna Vikas Joshi Venkatesan Chakaravarthy Ravi Kothari L V Subramaniam 2015 Analysis of Sampling Algorithms for Twitter International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence Berinsky A J 2008 Survey non response In W Donsbach amp M W Traugott Eds The Sage handbook of public opinion research pp 309 321 Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications a b Dillman D A Eltinge J L Groves R M amp Little R J A 2002 Survey nonresponse in design data collection and analysis In R M Groves D A Dillman J L Eltinge amp R J A Little Eds Survey nonresponse pp 3 26 New York John Wiley amp Sons Dillman D A Smyth J D amp Christian L M 2009 Internet mail and mixed mode surveys The tailored design method San Francisco Jossey Bass Vehovar V Batagelj Z Manfreda K L amp Zaletel M 2002 Nonresponse in web surveys In R M Groves D A Dillman J L Eltinge amp R J A Little Eds Survey nonresponse pp 229 242 New York John Wiley amp Sons Porter Whitcomb Weitzer 2004 Multiple surveys of students and survey fatigue In Porter Stephen R ed Overcoming survey research problems New directions for institutional research San Francisco Jossey Bass pp 63 74 ISBN 9780787974770 Retrieved 15 July 2019 Seneta E 1985 A Sketch of the History of Survey Sampling in Russia Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A General 148 2 118 125 doi 10 2307 2981944 JSTOR 2981944 David S Moore and George P McCabe Introduction to the Practice of Statistics Freedman David Pisani Robert Purves Roger Statistics SAMPLE COUNT Elections Department Singapore PDF Retrieved 3 September 2023 Ho Timothy 1 September 2023 Presidential Election 2023 How Accurate Will The Sample Count Be Tonight DollarsAndSense sg Retrieved 3 September 2023 Cochran William G 1977 01 01 Sampling Techniques 3rd Edition 3rd ed New York NY John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 16240 7 Further reading editSingh G N Jaiswal A K and Pandey A K 2021 Improved Imputation Methods for Missing Data in Two Occasion Successive Sampling Communications in Statistics Theory and Methods DOI 10 1080 03610926 2021 1944211 Chambers R L and Skinner C J editors 2003 Analysis of Survey Data Wiley ISBN 0 471 89987 9 Deming W Edwards 1975 On probability as a basis for action The American Statistician 29 4 pp 146 152 Gy P 2012 Sampling of Heterogeneous and Dynamic Material Systems Theories of Heterogeneity Sampling and Homogenizing Elsevier Science ISBN 978 0444556066 Korn E L and Graubard B I 1999 Analysis of Health Surveys Wiley ISBN 0 471 13773 1 Lucas Samuel R 2012 doi 10 1007 2Fs11135 012 9775 3 Beyond the Existence Proof Ontological Conditions Epistemological Implications and In Depth Interview Research Quality amp Quantity doi 10 1007 s11135 012 9775 3 Stuart Alan 1962 Basic Ideas of Scientific Sampling Hafner Publishing Company New York ISBN missing Smith T M F 1984 Present Position and Potential Developments Some Personal Views Sample surveys Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A 147 The 150th Anniversary of the Royal Statistical Society number 2 208 221 doi 10 2307 2981677 JSTOR 2981677 Smith T M F 1993 Populations and Selection Limitations of Statistics Presidential address Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A 156 2 144 166 doi 10 2307 2982726 JSTOR 2982726 Portrait of T M F Smith on page 144 Smith T M F 2001 Centenary Sample surveys Biometrika 88 1 167 243 doi 10 1093 biomet 88 1 167 Smith T M F 2001 Biometrika centenary Sample surveys In D M Titterington and D R Cox ed Biometrika One Hundred Years Oxford University Press pp 165 194 ISBN 978 0 19 850993 6 Whittle P May 1954 Optimum preventative sampling Journal of the Operations Research Society of America 2 2 197 203 doi 10 1287 opre 2 2 197 JSTOR 166605 Standards editISO edit ISO 2859 series ISO 3951 seriesASTM edit ASTM E105 Standard Practice for Probability Sampling Of Materials ASTM E122 Standard Practice for Calculating Sample Size to Estimate With a Specified Tolerable Error the Average for Characteristic of a Lot or Process ASTM E141 Standard Practice for Acceptance of Evidence Based on the Results of Probability Sampling ASTM E1402 Standard Terminology Relating to Sampling ASTM E1994 Standard Practice for Use of Process Oriented AOQL and LTPD Sampling Plans ASTM E2234 Standard Practice for Sampling a Stream of Product by Attributes Indexed by AQLANSI ASQ edit ANSI ASQ Z1 4U S federal and military standards edit MIL STD 105 MIL STD 1916External links edit nbsp Wikiversity has learning resources about Sampling statistics nbsp Media related to Sampling statistics at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sampling statistics amp oldid 1189024884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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