Design‐based Estimators Calibrated on Estimated Totals from Multiple Surveys
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6064685
DOI10.1111/insr.12160MaRDI QIDQ6064685
Yves Tillé, Alessio Guandalini
Publication date: 10 November 2023
Published in: International Statistical Review (Search for Journal in Brave)
Related Items (6)
Deville and Särndal's calibration: revisiting a 25-years-old successful optimization problem ⋮ Rejoinder on: ``Deville and Särndal's calibration: revisiting a 25-year-old successful optimization problem ⋮ A Two‐level GREG Estimator for Consistent Estimation in Household Surveys ⋮ An Efficient Approach for Statistical Matching of Survey Data Trough Calibration, Optimal Transport and Balanced Sampling ⋮ On making valid inferences by integrating data from surveys and other sources ⋮ Impact measurement and dimension reduction of auxiliary variables in calibration estimator using the Shapley decomposition
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Variance estimation of survey estimates calibrated on estimated control totals-an application to the extended regression estimator and the regression composite estimator
- Sampling algorithms.
- Post-Sampling Efficient QR-Prediction in Large-Sample Surveys
- Generalized calibration and application to weighting for non-response
- Finite Population Sampling With Multivariate Auxiliary Information
- The weighted residual technique for estimating the variance of the general regression estimator of the finite population total
- Calibration Estimators in Survey Sampling
- Aligning Estimates for Common Variables in Two or More Sample Surveys
- Combining Information from Multiple Surveys by using Regression for Efficient Small Domain Estimation
- Combining Independent Regression Estimators From Multiple Surveys
- Survey Design Under the Regression Superpopulation Model
- Combining information from multiple surveys through the empirical likelihood method
This page was built for publication: Design‐based Estimators Calibrated on Estimated Totals from Multiple Surveys