Displaying similar documents to “Comparison of two common estimators of the ratio of the means of independent normal variables in agricultural research.”

Improving small area estimation by combining surveys: new perspectives in regional statistics.

Alex Costa, Albert Satorra, Eva Ventura (2006)

SORT

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A national survey designed for estimating a specific population quantity is sometimes used for estimation of this quantity also for a small area, such as a province. Budget constraints do not allow a greater sample size for the small area, and so other means of improving estimation have to be devised. We investigate such methods and assess them by a Monte Carlo study. We explore how a complementary survey can be exploited in small area estimation. We use the context of the Spanish Labour...

Improving both domain and total area estimation by composition.

Alex Costa, Albert Satorra, Eva Ventura (2004)

SORT

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In this article we propose small area estimators for both the small and large area parameters. When the objective is to estimate parameters at both levels, optimality is achieved by a sample design that combines fixed and proportional allocation. In such a design, one fraction of the sample is distributed proportionally among the small areas and the rest is evenly distributed. Simulation is used to assess the performance of the direct estimator and two composite small area estimators,...

Comparison of six almost unbiased ratio estimators.

M. Dalabehera, L. N. Sahoo (1994)

Qüestiió

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In this paper, we compare six almost unbiased ratio estimators with respect to bias and efficiency for (i) finite populations, and (ii) infinite populations in which the joint distribution of the characters under study is bivariate normal.

The use of third-order moments in structural models.

Erik Meijer, Ab Mooijart (1994)

Qüestiió

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Structural models are usually estimated using only second order moments (covariances or correlations). When variables are nor multivariate normally distributed, however, methods that also fit higher order moments, such as skewnesses, are theoretically asymptotically preferable. This article reports result from a Monte Carlo simulation study in which estimators that fit both second-order moments and third-order moments are compared with estimators that fit only second-order moments. ...

Adaptive procedures

Marie Hušková (1983)

Acta Universitatis Carolinae. Mathematica et Physica

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