1 / 22

INTRODUCTION TO SURVEY SAMPLING

INTRODUCTION TO SURVEY SAMPLING. October 6, 2010 Linda Owens Survey Research Laboratory University of Illinois at Chicago www.srl.uic.edu. Census or sample?. Census: Gathering information about every individual in a population Sample: Selection of a small subset of a population.

moe
Download Presentation

INTRODUCTION TO SURVEY SAMPLING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. INTRODUCTION TO SURVEY SAMPLING October 6, 2010 Linda Owens Survey Research Laboratory University of Illinois at Chicago www.srl.uic.edu

  2. Census or sample? • Census: • Gathering information about every individual in a population • Sample: • Selection of a small subset of a population

  3. Why sample instead of taking a census? • Less expensive • Less time-consuming • More accurate • Samples can lead to statistical inference about the entire population

  4. Probability Sample • Generalize to the entire population • Unbiased results • Known, non-zero probability of selection • Non-probability Sample • Exploratory research • Convenience • Probability of selection is unknown

  5. Target population • Definition: The population to which we want to generalize our findings. • Unit of analysis: Individual/Household/City • Geography: State of Illinois/Cook County/ Chicago • Age/Gender • Other variables

  6. Examples of target populations • Population of adults (18+) in Cook County • UIC faculty, staff, students • Youth age 5 to 18 in Cook County

  7. Sampling frame • A complete list of all units, at the first stage of sampling, from which a sample is drawn • For example, • Lists • Phone numbers in specific area codes • Maps of geographic areas

  8. Sampling frames • Example 1: • Population: Adults (18+) in Cook County • Possible Frame: list of phone numbers, list of block maps, list of addresses • Example 2: • Population: Females age 40–60 in Chicago • Possible Frame: list of phone numbers, list of block maps • Example 3: • Population: Youth age 5 to 18 in Cook County • Possible Frame: List of schools

  9. Sample designs for probability samples • Simple random samples • Systematic samples • Stratified samples • Cluster • Multi-stage

  10. Simple random sampling • Definition: Every element has the same probability of selection and every combination of elements has the same probability of selection. • Probability of selection:n/N, • where n = sample size; N = population size • Use Random Number tables, software packages to generate random numbers • Most precision estimates assume SRS

  11. Systematic sampling • Definition: Every element has the same probability of selection, but not every combination can be selected. • Use when drawing SRS is difficult • List of elements is long & not computerized • Procedure • Determine population size N and sample size n • Calculate sampling interval (N/n) • Pick random start between 1 & sampling interval • Take every ith case • Problem of periodicity

  12. Stratified sampling: Proportionate • To ensure sample resembles some aspect of population • Population is divided into subgroups (strata) • Students by year in school • Faculty by gender • Simple Random Sample (with same probability of selection) taken from each stratum.

  13. Stratified sampling: Disproportionate • Major use is comparison of subgroups • Population is divided into subgroups (strata) • Compare girls & boys who play Little League • Compare seniors & freshmen who live in dorms • Probability of selection needs to be higher for smaller stratum (girls & seniors) to be able to compare subgroups. • Post-stratification weights

  14. Cluster sampling • Typically used in face-to-face surveys • Population divided into clusters • Schools (earlier example) • Blocks • Reasons for cluster sampling • Reduction in cost • No satisfactory sampling frame available

  15. Determining sample size: SRS • Need to consider • Precision • Variation in subject of interest • Formula • Sample size no = CI2 * (pq) Precision • For example: no = 1.962 * (.5 * .5) • .052 • Sample size not dependent on population size.

  16. Sample size: Other issues • Finite Population Correction • n = no/(1 + no/N) • Design effects • Analysis of subgroups • Increase size to accommodate nonresponse • Cost

  17. Cell Phones • 24.5% of US Households are cell phone only (Blumberg & Luke, 2010) • Cell phone only households: • Unrelated adults • Non-white • Young (<=29) • Poor • RDD sample frames often do not include cell phones and can lead to bias

  18. Cell Phones, cont • Cell phone frames harder to target geographically than landline frame • Frame overlap with RDD • Cell phone surveys expensive and have low rates of participation • Public Opinion Quarterly, 2007 Special Issue, Vol. 71, Num. 5

  19. Address Based Sampling • Subject of many papers at 2010 AAPOR • Sampling addresses from a near universal listing of residential mail delivery locations (Michael Link) • Post-office Delivery Sequence Files (DSF)

  20. Address Based Sampling Advantages • Can be matched to name (85%) and listed telephone numbers (65%) • Can be used for multiple modes of administration • Includes non-telephone households and cell-only households • More efficient than traditional block-listing

  21. Address Based Sampling Disadvantages • Incomplete in rural areas (although improving with 9-1-1 address conversion) • Difficulties with “multidrop” addresses • Incomplete coverage for mail only or telephone only administration • Best when used as part of multi-mode administration

  22. Before taking questions… • Slides available at www.srl.uic.edu; click on “Seminar Series” • Next seminar: Introduction to Web Surveys, Thursday, Oct. 14 • Evaluation

More Related