Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has...

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Statistical Sampling

Transcript of Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has...

Page 1: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Statistical Sampling

Page 2: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Sampling

Page 3: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Simple Random Sampling

• Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

• However…

Page 4: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Systemic Sampling

• Beware coincidental bias of sample interval and natural area.

• Ridges• River bends• Etc.

Page 5: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Stratified Random Sampling

• The point is to reduce variability within strata.

• Example: if you were measuring average estrogen levels in humans, you would stratify male versus female.

• Can you think of some forest examples?

Page 6: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Stratified Random Sampling

Page 7: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Sampling

mean of the squared deviations

Square root of variance

In Excel=AVERAGE(A1:An)

Page 8: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Standard Deviation

𝜎=√ 1𝑛−1∑𝑖=1

𝑛

(𝑥1−𝑥)2

Use Excel function

=STDEV(A1:An) or =STDEV.S(A1:An)

Page 9: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Exercise in Random Sampling

• Student heights equals population• Calculate population mean, etc.• Take a systemic 20% sample compare estimates

of population.• Take a 50% sample (systemic or random) and

compare results.

• Calculate mean, variance, SD and CV of both population and samples.

Page 10: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

VariabilityThe differences between individuals or units in a population

Page 11: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Standard Error of the mean

• Equals the standard deviation of all possible sample means around the true population mean.

Page 12: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Finite Population Correction FactorThe finite population correction factor serves to reduce the standard error when relatively large samples are drawn from finite populations

Page 13: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Confidence Interval

• specify the precision of the sample mean in relation to the population mean.

Page 14: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Student’s t distribution

Page 15: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Confidence Interval

Page 16: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Effect of Standard Deviation

The red distribution has a mean of 40 and a standard deviation of 5;the blue distribution has a mean of 60 and a standard deviation of 10.For the red distribution, 68% of the distribution is between 45 and 55;for the blue distribution, 68% is between 40 and 60.

Page 17: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Sampling ErrorRather than work with absolute confidence limits, convert them to a percent of the sample mean which is called sampling error. The notation in the handbook is an upper case E. Take the confidence interval quantity and scale it to the sample mean by dividing by the sample mean. Express this value as a percent by multiplying by 100. By expressing the confidence interval as a percentage, the mean can be plus or minus the percentage derived.

For example, at 95% confidence, an estimate of the mean has a confidence interval of 46.4 plus or minus 2.6. When expressed as a sampling error percent, the mean is plus or minus 5.6% which says the true population mean falls within 95% percent of the estimate.

Page 18: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Determining Sample SizeFor a 95% confidence level, the t value approaches 2 as the sample size gets large, so a t value of 2 is commonly used when estimating sample size. The CV is the relative variability in the population being sampled. Use the population CV if known or use an estimate if it is not known. The E represents the desired sampling error, for example, 10%

Page 19: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Items with Possible

Impacts on Sampling Intensity

Page 20: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Effect of CV ChangeAs the coefficient of variation increases, so does the required sample size.

Page 21: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Using CV for Comparison

Because CVs have no associated unit of measure, they can be useful in comparing sampling methods to determine which is most efficient.

So which method of sampling would require fewer samples?

Page 22: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

• The USFS Way

Sampling Intensity Revisited

Page 23: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

1. Determine the sampling error for the sale as a whole. (set to 10%)2. Subdivide (or stratify) the sale population into sampling

components as needed to reduce the variability within the sampling strata.

3. Calculate the coefficient of variation (CV) by stratum and a weighted CV over all strata. (this will be covered more later in the statistics lectures)

4. Calculate number of plots for the sale as a whole and then distribute by stratum.

Sample Selection – from Precruise data

Page 24: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Number of PlotsValue of t is assumed to be 2Error is set at 10%

Page 25: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

• For each stratum, the calculation would look like this:

• n1 = (17.6 * 185) / 67.9 = 48 plots

• n2 = (7.7 * 185) / 67.9 = 21 plots

• n3 = (7.2 * 185) / 67.9 = 20 plots

• n4 = (35.4 * 185) / 67.9 = 96 plots• Which totals to the 185 plots for the sale.

Distribute Plots by Stratum

Page 26: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Tree Expansion Factor• 1 divided by the fixed plot size times the

number of plots

Page 27: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Sample Error - step 1 (Calculate Standard Error)

Page 28: Statistical Sampling. Sampling Simple Random Sampling Every possible combination of sample units has an equal and independent chance of being selected.

Sample Error – Step 2

36.2% is a bit larger than the level we set to begin with (10%) – Implications?