Estimation of population proportion with ranked set samples in the presence of multiple concomitants

Alvandi, Amirhossein (2019) Estimation of population proportion with ranked set samples in the presence of multiple concomitants. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland.

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Abstract

Ranked Set Sampling (RSS) design as one of the most renowned cost-effective sampling methods, have found a wide range of applications from agriculture to medical research. This statistical approach is commonly used in situations where measuring a variable of interest is expensive and time-consuming, however, small ordered sets of sampling units can be produced utilizing some source of auxiliary information as the ranking criterion. These concomitant variables may include any easily measurable characteristic of the units such as visually assessed cytological characteristics of patients. When ranking the units in a set, it is often unfeasible to assign unique ranks to all units. To provide some flexibility, we allow declaring ties among the individuals, and utilize the tie structure data for estimation purposes. Several authors have applied this sampling method to the problem of population proportion estimation. Throughout this thesis, we discuss various estimation procedures for population proportion using Partially Rank Ordered Set (PROS) sampling method which accomplishes the tie declarations by dividing sampling units into partially ranked subsets. We also discuss an estimation procedure that use logistic regression proportion estimates for ranking the sampling units. However, the most important contribution of our research is to extend six non-parametric and maximum likelihood population proportion estimators to incorporate the ranking information obtained from multiple sources. Through extensive simulation studies, and real data analysis, we investigate the performance of eight proportion estimators under various settings of ranking quality, and tie structures among the ranks. We show the universal superiority of RSS-based estimators over their counterparts using Simple Random Sampling (SRS), and the significant improvement in the estimation efficiency by combining the tie structure information of multiple concomitant variables.

Item Type: Thesis (Masters)
URI: http://research.library.mun.ca/id/eprint/13970
Item ID: 13970
Additional Information: Includes bibliographical references (pages 65-67).
Keywords: Ranked Set Sampling, Population Proportion Estimation, Logistic Regression, Partially Rank Ordered Set Sampling
Department(s): Science, Faculty of > Mathematics and Statistics
Date: August 2019
Date Type: Submission
Library of Congress Subject Heading: Sampling (Statistics); Mathematical statistics; Logistic regression analysis

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