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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 1 of 28 Chapter 1 Section 3 Other Effective Sampling Methods
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 2 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Learning objectives Obtain a stratified sample Obtain a systematic sample Obtain a cluster sample 1 2 3
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 3 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Learning objectives Obtain a stratified sample Obtain a systematic sample Obtain a cluster sample 1 2 3
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 4 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●There are other effective ways to collect data Stratified sampling Systematic sampling Cluster sampling ●Each of these is particularly appropriate in certain specific circumstances
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 5 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●A stratified sample is obtained when we choose a simple random sample from subgroups of a population This is appropriate when the population is made up of nonoverlapping (distinct) groups called strata ●A stratified sample is obtained when we choose a simple random sample from subgroups of a population This is appropriate when the population is made up of nonoverlapping (distinct) groups called strata Within each strata, the individuals are likely to have a common attribute ●A stratified sample is obtained when we choose a simple random sample from subgroups of a population This is appropriate when the population is made up of nonoverlapping (distinct) groups called strata Within each strata, the individuals are likely to have a common attribute Between the stratas, the individuals are likely to have different common attributes
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 6 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Example – polling a population about a political issue It is reasonable to divide up the population into Democrats, Republicans, and Independents It is reasonable to believe that the opinions of individuals within each party are the same It is reasonable to believe that the opinions differ from group to group ●Therefore it makes sense to consider each strata separately
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 7 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Example – a poll about safety within a university ●Three identified strata Resident students Commuter students Faculty and staff ●Example – a poll about safety within a university ●Three identified strata Resident students Commuter students Faculty and staff ●It is reasonable to assume that the opinions within each group are similar ●It is reasonable to assume that the opinions between each group are different
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 8 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Assume that the sizes of the strata are Resident students – 5,000 Commuter students – 4,000 Faculty and staff – 1,000 ●If we wish to obtain a sample of size n = 100 that reflects the same relative proportions, we would want to choose 50 resident students 40 commuter students 10 faculty and staff
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 9 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●For each strata Choose 50 out of 5,000 resident students with a simple random sample Choose 40 out of 4,000 commuter students with a simple random sample Choose 10 out of 1,000 faculty and staff with a simple random sample ●This provides us with a stratified sample that reflects the actual proportions of our strata within the population
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 10 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Learning objectives Obtain a stratified sample Obtain a systematic sample Obtain a cluster sample 1 2 3
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 11 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●A systematic sample is obtained when we choose every k th individual in a population ●The first individual selected corresponds to a random number between 1 and k ●Systematic sampling is appropriate When we do not have a frame When we do not have a list of all the individuals in a population
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 12 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Example – polling customers about satisfaction with service ●We do not have a list of customers arriving that day ●We do not even know how many customers will arrive that day ●Simple random sampling (and stratified sampling) cannot be implemented
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 13 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Assume that We want to choose a sample of 40 customers We believe that there will be about 350 customers ●Assume that We want to choose a sample of 40 customers We believe that there will be about 350 customers ●Values of k k = 7 is reasonable because it is likely that enough customers will arrive to reach the 40 target k = 2 is not reasonable because we will only interview the very early customers k = 20 is not reasonable because it is unlikely that enough customers will arrive to reach the 40 target
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 14 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Using the value k = 7 We choose a random number between 1 and 7, assume that it is 4 We interview the 4 th customer that day ●Using the value k = 7 We choose a random number between 1 and 7, assume that it is 4 We interview the 4 th customer that day We interview the 11 th customer that day (11 = 4 + 7) ●Using the value k = 7 We choose a random number between 1 and 7, assume that it is 4 We interview the 4 th customer that day We interview the 11 th customer that day (11 = 4 + 7) We interview the 18 th customer that day (18 = 11 + 7) ●Using the value k = 7 We choose a random number between 1 and 7, assume that it is 4 We interview the 4 th customer that day We interview the 11 th customer that day (11 = 4 + 7) We interview the 18 th customer that day (18 = 11 + 7) We interview the 25 th customer that day (25 = 18 + 7) ●Using the value k = 7 We choose a random number between 1 and 7, assume that it is 4 We interview the 4 th customer that day We interview the 11 th customer that day (11 = 4 + 7) We interview the 18 th customer that day (18 = 11 + 7) We interview the 25 th customer that day (25 = 18 + 7) ●We continue to interview customers until we reach our target of 40 in the sample
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 15 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●This requires approximately 280 customers 280 is small enough so that we will have enough customers arriving (we expect around 350) 280 is large enough to cover the majority of the expected 350 customers ●The choice of k is difficult if have no idea of the total number of customers ●Sometimes some values of k are not appropriate (for example k = 10 when the individuals arrive as male, female, male, female, male, …)
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 16 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Learning objectives Obtain a stratified sample Obtain a systematic sample Obtain a cluster sample 1 2 3
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 17 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●A cluster sample is obtained when we choose a random set of groups and then select all individuals within those groups ●We can obtain a sample of size 50 by choosing 10 groups of 5 ●Cluster sampling is appropriate when it is very time consuming or expensive to choose the individuals one at a time
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 18 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Example – testing the fill of bottles It is time consuming to pull individual bottles It is expensive to waste an entire cartons of 12 bottles to just test one bottle ●If we would like to test 240 bottles, we could Randomly select 20 cartons Test all 12 bottles within each carton ●This reduces the time and expense required
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 19 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●A convenience sample is obtained when we choose individuals in an easy, or convenient way ●Self-selecting samples are examples of convenience sampling Individuals who respond to television or radio announcements ●A convenience sample is obtained when we choose individuals in an easy, or convenient way ●Self-selecting samples are examples of convenience sampling Individuals who respond to television or radio announcements ●“Just asking around” is an example of convenience sampling Individuals who are known to the pollster
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 20 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Convenience sampling has little statistical validity The design is poor The results are suspect ●However, there are times when convenience sampling could be useful as a rough guess If none of your co-workers are concerned about a particular issue, then it is possible that the set of all employees would not be concerned about that issue
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 21 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●A multistage sample is obtained using a combination of Simple random sampling Stratified sampling Systematic sampling Cluster sampling ●Many large scale samples (the US census in noncensus years) use multistage sampling
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 22 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●Example – choosing 3 rd grade students ●The following method combines cluster sampling with simple random sampling ●We want a sample of 240 3 rd grade students We randomly select 20 elementary schools We perform a simple random sample within each school to choose 12 students
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 23 of 28 Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●The sample size is very important in statistical analysis ●Certain sample sizes are required to reach certain conclusions ●This will be covered in later chapters
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 24 of 28 Summary: Chapter 1 – Section 3 ●There are other sampling methods that are particularly useful in certain situations Stratified sampling to cover the different strata Systematic sampling when the frame is unknown Cluster sampling to reduce the time and expense required Multistage sampling for effective large scale samples ●The choice of sampling methods depends on the structure of the population and the goals of the analyst
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 25 of 28 Summary: Chapter 1 – Section 3
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 26 of 28 Summary: Chapter 1 – Section 3
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 27 of 28 Summary: Chapter 1 – Section 3
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Sullivan – Fundamentals of Statistics – 2 nd Edition – Chapter 1 Section 3 – Slide 28 of 28 Summary: Chapter 1 – Section 3
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