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The NSF-Census Research Network (NCRN) Spring 2014 Meeting Introduction by John Thompson Director, Census Bureau
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Purpose The NSF-Census Research Network provides support for a set of research nodes Each staffed by a team of scientists conducting interdisciplinary research and educational activities Focused on methodological questions of interest and significance to the broader research community and to the Federal Statistical System, particularly the U.S. Census Bureau. Activities advance both fundamental and applied knowledge as well as further the training of current and future generations of researchers 2
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3 main objectives for grantees Perform high quality research of use to the Federal Statistical System Undertake collaboration that leads to innovative FSS activities Educate students to become familiar with issues of economic and social measurement 3
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NODES Eight grants (6 medium and 2 small nodes) were awarded, with work beginning 1 October 2011 and each running for 5 years. 4 Medium NodesSmall Nodes Carnegie-MellonU Colorado – Boulder/U Tennessee CornellNorthwester Univ. Duke/NISS Univ. of Michigan Univ. of Missouri-Columbia Univ. of Nebraska - Lincoln NSF has also awarded a coordination grant (NISS/Cornell); see www.ncrn.infowww.ncrn.info
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Activities Conferences are held semi-annually Last conference focused on record linkage and metadata Also hold series of virtual seminars Allows sharing between nodes Series will start back up in October Previous seminars available for view (see www.ncrn.info)www.ncrn.info 70 published articles or pre-prints supported in whole or part by NCRN (as of 9/30/13) 5
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NCRN and Census: Research examples related to Census guiding principles 6 1.Integrated metadata-driven survey and census designs, processes and products Northwestern: (a) guidelines for studying data use and cost-benefit analysis of data for allocations; (b) methods for trading off cost, sample size, and response rates
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NCRN and Census: Research examples related to Census guiding principles 7 2. Implement adaptive design methods in all or our surveys and censuses Nebraska: Key focus: quality of data derived from surveys, including ADAPTIVE DESIGN, Session tomorrow morning, (SURVEY INFORMATICS – RECENT VIRTUAL SEMINAR)
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NCRN and Census: Research examples related to Census guiding principles 8 5. Be a Research-Driven Organization Coordinating Node: Perform outreach to Census, non- Census statistical agencies, and larger research community (All nodes contributing toward this principle)
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NCRN and Census: Research examples related to Census guiding principles 9 7. Guard against insular thinking Coordinating Node: Virtual Seminars on a broad range of topics; scholars at “Summer at Census” Cornell: Training INFO7470 Duke/Michigan: SIPP Training Workshop Colorado/Tennessee: Training on geo-spatial statistics Michigan: Training for users of novel synthetic data
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NCRN and Census: Research examples related to Census guiding principles 10 8. Provide open data dissemination capabilities Cornell: Standards-driven effort to publish as much information about confidential microdata (see Session 1 today’s agenda) Michigan: Training for users of novel synthetic data
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NCRN and Census: Research examples related to Census guiding principles 11 8. Provide open data dissemination capabilities (con’t.) Cornell, CMU, Duke/NISS: Confidentiality/disclosure avoidance research Colorado/Tennessee: Improved geographic statistics Missouri: ACS focus: ACS small area estimates, spatiotemporal models and estimates, disclosure avoidance
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NCRN and Census: Research examples related to Census guiding principles 12 9. Fully leverage external data sources Michigan Node: Using social media (Twitter) to track job loss. CMU: Matching methods for complex data
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Agenda Today and tomorrow’s agenda focused on: –Data Documentation Initiatives (DDI) –Employer List Linkages - Summer Work Group for Employer List Linkage (SWELL) –Questionnaire design for 21 st century SWELL project is prime example of collaboration between Census and NCRN (Michigan + Cornell) personnel. In fact, SWELL grew out of internal Census (DEV10) project (LEHD/ACS). Involves CMU/Cornell/DUKE/Michigan 13
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Agenda Tomorrow’s panel on Adaptive Design -Plans for Adaptive Design at Census Bureau (CAD) -Univ. of Nebraska node on web surveys in adaptive designs -Imputation of continuous data (Duke node) - Privacy Trade-offs versus cost efficiency (Carnegie Mellon) 14
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Upcoming events SIPP Workshop – Univ. of Michigan June 23-27 SUMMER AT CENSUS Seminar: "Communicating Uncertainty in Official Economic Statistics” Charles Manski. June 25 at Census HQ. Next NCRN conference: NYC, Sept. 11-12 15
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For Additional Information www.census.gov/NCRN/ www.census.gov/NCRN/ www.ncrn.info (contains calendar of events). www.ncrn.info Nancy Bates is new Census Bureau NCRN coordinator replacing Dan Weinberg nancy.a.bates@census.govancy.a.bates@census.gov 16
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