Deconvolution with application to estimation of sampling probabilities and the Horvitz-Thompson estimator

From MaRDI portal
Publication:6244653

arXiv1309.2136MaRDI QIDQ6244653FDOQ6244653

Theodor Itskov, Eitan Greenshtein

Publication date: 9 September 2013

Abstract: We elaborate on a deconvolution method, used to estimate the empirical distribution of unknown parameters, as suggested recently by Efron (2013). It is applied to estimating the empirical distribution of the 'sampling probabilities' of m sampled items. The estimated empirical distribution is used to modify the Horvitz-Thompson estimator. The performance of the modified Horvitz-Thompson estimator is studied in two examples. In one example the sampling probabilities are estimated based on the number of visits until a response was obtained. The other example is based on real data from panel sampling, where in four consecutive months there are corresponding four attempts to interview each member in a panel. The sampling probabilities are estimated based on the number of successful attempts. We also discuss briefly, further applications of deconvolution, including estimation of False discovery rate.













This page was built for publication: Deconvolution with application to estimation of sampling probabilities and the Horvitz-Thompson estimator

Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6244653)