Web Survey Bibliography
Title On Sampling of Very Rare Human Populations
Author Sudman, S.
Source Journal of the American Statistical Association, 67, 338
Year 1972
Access date 14.04.2014
Abstract
Specialized samples of very rare populations require expensive cluster search procedures. Most of the effort is wasted since no or very few members of the rare population are located. Bayesian optimum sampling procedures exclude such clusters, but the critical problem is identifying them. The ideas of Wald on sequential sampling are applied and prove to be highly efficient.
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Year of publicationBefore 1981
Bibliographic typeJournal article
Web survey bibliography - Before 1981 (14)
- Surveys by telephone: a national comparison with personal interviews; 1979; Groves, R. M., Kahn, R. L.
- Evaluation of the Feeling Thermometer. A Report to the National Election Study Board based on data from...; 1979; Weisberg, H. F., Miller, A. H.
- Generalizing Mail SurveyInducement Methods: Population Interactionswith Anonymity and Sponsorship; 1979; Jones, W. H.
- Applied Sampling (Quantitative studies in social relations); 1976; Sudman, S.
- Logic and conversation; 1975; Grice, P. H.
- Response effects in surveys: A review and synthesis; 1974; Sudman, S., Bradburn, N. M.
- On Sampling of Very Rare Human Populations; 1972; Sudman, S.
- Some reflections on consumer panels; 1969; Hill, R. W.
- A theory of organization and change within value-attitude systems; 1968; Rokeach, M.
- The Norm of Reciprocity: A Preliminary Statement; 1960; Gouldner, A.W.
- A generalization of sampling without replacement from a finite universe; 1952; Horvitz, D. G., Thompson, D. J.
- The art of asking questions; 1951; Payne, S.
- Gauging public opinion; 1944; Cantril, H.
- Recent trends in the development of market research; 1936