Sampling and Statistics Flashcards
What is population?
complete collection of elements to be studied, the group to which the results of research are intended to be generalized
What is a Sample?
a subset of elements drawn from a population to draw conclusions or make estimates about the larger population
What is sampling error?
chance difference between what is collected from the sample and how it relates to the true value of the parameter for the population
What is the difference between sampling with and without replacement?
With Replacement- each unit that is selected for the sample is put back into the population before the next unit is drawn from the sample to insure equal chances throughout the population to be selected
Without Replacement- once a unit is selected from the population it is not returned to the population before the next unit is drawn (much more common)
What is probability sampling?
sampling that uses some form of random selection and every unit of the population must have the same probability of being selected
What is simple random sampling?
all subjects have equal chance of being selected
What is systematic sampling?
subjects are selected by taking every nth subject from the population
What is stratified random sampling?
also called proportional random sampling
population is divided into homogenous subgroups and then a simple random sample is drawn from each, this insures that your sample includes subjects from key groups of the population
What is cluster sampling?
population is divided into clusters or areas and a random sample of the clusters is selected
What is convenience sampling?
a non-probability sample that is selected from subjects who are convenient or readily available to the researcher
What is purposive sampling?
a non-probability sample where subjects are deliberately selected based on predefined criteria chosen by the investigators
What is quota sampling?
population is divided into subgroups like it is for stratified random sampling but subjects from each group are not chosen at random but by convenience
What is snowball sampling?
subjects are identified by asking existing subjects for names of other possible participants
Used when the characteristic to be studied is rare and finding subjects would be difficult and expensive
What is Kurtosis?
the “peakedness” of a distribution, a high kurtosis distribution has a sharp peak and longer fatter tails while a low kurtosis distribution has a more rounded peak and shorter thinner tails
How much of all values fall within one standard deviation above and below the mean?
How many in 2 standard deviations?
3 SDs?
68%
95%
99%