JSM 2012 Home

JSM 2012 Online Program

The views expressed here are those of the individual authors and not necessarily those of the JSM sponsors, their officers, or their staff.

Online Program Home

Abstract Details

Activity Number: 669
Type: Contributed
Date/Time: Thursday, August 2, 2012 : 10:30 AM to 12:20 PM
Sponsor: Section on Survey Research Methods
Abstract - #304787
Title: Comparing Recent Approaches For Bootstrapping Sample Survey Data: A First Step Towards A Unified Approach
Author(s): M. Giovanna Ranalli*+ and Fulvia Mecatti
Companies: University of Perugia and University of Milano-Bicocca
Address: Dept. Economics, Finance and Statistics, Perugia 06123, , Italy
Keywords: Bootstrap principles ; Conditional Poisson design ; non-central Hypergeometric distribution ; Probability-proportional-to-size design ; Pseudo-population ; Variance estimation
Abstract:

Bootstrap algorithms are simple and appealing solutions for variance estimation under a complex sampling design, however, they must account for the non-iid nature of data. Literature about bootstrapping finite population samples appears to have developed according to two major approaches. A more practical "ad-hoc" approach refers to the so-called scaling problem and is based on a data-rescaling so that, in the linear case, the resulting bootstrap estimate for the variance perfectly matches the analytic variance estimate. A more fundamental "plug-in" approach is based on the mimicking bootstrap principle and on the bootstrap population created on the basis of (original) sample data. Recent proposals suggest a direct bootstrap matching the linear case variance but avoiding any data scaling under mixed re-sampling designs. In this paper, a new perspective to the bootstrap population plug-in approach is provided that avoids the physical reconstruction of the bootstrap population. Basic sampling designs, both with and without replacement as well as unequal probability designs are considered. Focusing on probability-proportional-to-size sampling, a simulation study is conducted that compares all the approaches considered.


The address information is for the authors that have a + after their name.
Authors who are presenting talks have a * after their name.

Back to the full JSM 2012 program




2012 JSM Online Program Home

For information, contact jsm@amstat.org or phone (888) 231-3473.

If you have questions about the Continuing Education program, please contact the Education Department.