Sampling Data - AP Statistics

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Multistage Sample

Sampling schemes that combine several sampling sampling methods are called multistage samples. For example, a national polling service may stratify the country by geographical regions, select a random sample of cities from each region, and then interview a cluster of residents in each city.

Statistic, sample statistic

Statistics are values calculated for sample data. Those that correspond to, and thus estimate, a population parameter, are of particular interest. For example, the mean income of all employed people in a representative sample can provide a good estimate of the corresponding population parameter. The term "sample statistic" is sometimes used, usually to parallel the corresponding term "population parameter"

Sample Survey

a study that asks questions of a sample drawn from some population in the hope of learning something about the entire population. Polls taken to assess voter preferences are common sample surveys.

Convenience sample

A convenience sample consists of the individuals who are conveniently available. Convenience samples often fail to be representative because every individual in the population is not equally convenient to sample

Population parameter

A numerically valued attribute of a model for a population. We rarely expect to know the true value of a population parameter, but we do hope to estimate it from sampled data. For example, the mean income of all employed people in the country is a population parameter.

Stratified random sample

A sample design in which the population is divided into several subpopulations, or strata, and random samples are then drawn from each stratum. If the strata are homogeneous, but are different from each other, a stratified sample may yield more consistent results than an SRS.

Systematic Sample

A sample drawn by selecting individuals systematically from a sampling frame. When there is no relationship between the order of the sampling frame and the variables of interest, a systematic sample can be representative.

Representative

A sample is said to be representative if the statistics computed from it accurately reflect the corresponding population parameters.

Simple random sample

A sample random sample of sample size n is a sample in which each set of n elements in the population has an equal chance of selection

Census

A sample that consists of the entire population is called a census.

Cluster Sample

A sampling design in which entire groups, or clusters, are chosen at random. Cluster sampling is usually selected as a matter of convenience, practicality, or cost. Each cluster should be representative of the population, so all the clusters should be heterogeneous and similar to each other

Under-coverage

A sampling scheme that biases the sample in a way that gives a part of the population less representation than it has in the population suffers from under-coverage

Pilot

A small trial run of a survey to check whether questions are clear. A pilot study can reduce errors due to ambiguous questions.

Bias

Any systematic failure of a sampling method to represent its population is bias. Biased sampling methods tend to over- or underestimate parameters. It is almost impossible to recover from bias, so efforts to avoid it are well spent. Common errors include - relying on voluntary response - under-coverage of the population - nonresponse bias - response bias

Response bias

Anything in a survey design that influences responses fails under the heading of response bias. One typical response response bias arises from the wording of questions, which may suggest a favored response. Voters, for example, are more likely to express support of the "the president" than support of the particular person holding that office at the moment.

Voluntary response bias

Bias introduced to sample when individuals can choose on their own whether to participate in the sample. Samples based on voluntary response are always invalid and cannot be recovered, no matter how large the sample size.

Nonresponse bias

Bias introduced when a large fraction of those sampled fails to respond. Those who do respond are likely to not represent the entire population. Voluntary response bias is a form of nonresponse bias, but nonresponse may occur for other reasons. For example, those who are at work during the day won't respond to a telephone survey conducted only working hours

Randomization

The best defense against bias is randomization, in which each individual is given a fair, random chance of selection

Sample Size

The number of individuals in a sample. The sample size determines how well the sample represents the population, not the fraction of the population sampled.

Sampling frame

a list of individuals from whom the sample is drawn is called the sampling frame. Individuals who may be in the population of interest, but who are not in the sampling frame, cannot be included in any sample.

Sampling variability

the natural tendency of randomly drawn smoke to differ, one from another, Sometimes, unfortunately, called sampling error, sampling variability is no error at all, but just the natural result of random sampling


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