Design effect of randomized systematic sampling |
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Authors: | Siegfried Gabler Horst Stenger |
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Institution: | 1. GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences , Mannheim , Germany siegfried.gabler@gesis.org;3. Department of Economics , University of Mannheim , Mannheim , Germany |
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Abstract: | In statistical practice, systematic sampling (SYS) is used in many modifications due to its simple handling. In addition, SYS may provide efficiency gains if it is well adjusted to the structure of the population under study. However, if SYS is based on an inappropriate picture of the population a high decrease of efficiency, i.e. a high increase in variance may result by changing from simple random sampling to SYS. In the context of two-stage designs SYS so far seems often in use for subsampling within the primary units. As an alternative to this practice, we propose to randomize the order of the primary units, then to select systematically a number of primary units and, thereafter, to draw secondary units by simple random sampling without replacement within the primary units selected. This procedure is more efficient than simple random sampling with replacement from the whole population of all secondary units, i.e. the variance of an adequate estimator for a total is never increased by changing from simple random sampling to randomized SYS whatever be the values associated by a characteristic with the secondary units, while there are values for which the variance decreases for the change mentioned. This result should hold generally, even if our proof, so far, is not complete for general sample sizes. |
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Keywords: | design effect randomized systematic sampling variance generating matrix |
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