APS Section 4.1

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cluster sampling

A marine biologist wants to estimate the mean size of the barnacle Semibalanus balnoides on a stretch of rocky shoreline. To do so, he randomly selected twenty 10-cm. square plots and measured the size of every barnacle in each plot. This is an example of

Wording Bias

A phone survey was conducted and the following question was asked of the respondents: "Do you agree that a national system of health insurance should be favored because it would provide health insurance for everyone and would reduce administrative costs?" 76% of the respondents agree with the statement. This is an example of

a voluntary response sample

A television station is interested in predicting whether voters in its viewing area are in favor of offshore drilling. It asks its viewers to phone in and indicate whether they support/are in favor of or are opposed to this practice. Of the 2241 viewers who phoned in, 1574 (70%) were opposed to offshore drilling. The viewers who phoned in are

nonresponse bias

Frequently, telephone poll-takers call near dinner time—between 6 pm and 7 pm—because most people are at home them. This is an effort to avoid

a convenience sample

In order to assess the opinion of students at the University of Minnesota on campus snow removal, a reporter for the student newspaper interviews the first 12 students he meets who are willing to express their opinion. The method of sampling used is

multistage sampling.

In order to select a sample of undergraduate students in the United States, I select a simple random sample of four states. From each of these states, I select a simple random sample of two colleges or universities. Finally, from each of these eight colleges or universities, I select a simple random sample of 20 undergraduates. My final sample consists of 160 undergraduates. This is an example of

undercoverage bias

Just before the presidential election of 1936, the magazine Literary Digest predicted—incorrectly, as it turned out—that Alf Landon would defeat Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Landon lost in a landslide. It turned out that the magazine had only polled its own subscribers, plus others from a list of automobile owners and a list of people who had telephone service. All three groups had higher than typical incomes during the Great Depression. This is an example of

response bias

The Bradley effect is a theory proposed to explain observed discrepancies between voter opinion polls and election outcomes in some elections where a white candidate and a non-white candidate run against each other. The theory proposes that some voters tend to tell pollsters that they are undecided or likely to vote for a non-white candidate, and yet, on election day, vote for the white opponent. This is an example of

stratified random sample

You plan to give a math achievement test to samples of 15 year-olds from both the U.S. and Korea in order to compare mathematics knowledge in the two countries. In each country, you will randomly choose 300 students from low-income families 400 students from middle-income families 200 students from high-income families The sample from Korea is a

Simple Random Sample (SRS)

a sample that gives every possible sample of the same size the same chance to be selected.


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