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  2. A target population, also referred to as a target audience, is a group of people with particular characteristics that may be effectively defined to distinguish them from the general population.

  3. Target population is an informal term used mostly in epidemiology. It’s general defined to mean a group or set of elements that you want to know more information about. Most of the time, “target population” and “ population ” are synonymous.

  4. Population and Target Population in Research Methodology

    www.researchgate.net/publication/380090711...

    This paper thoroughly explores the foundational principles governing population and target population concepts within research methodology.

  5. Selecting the Study Participants - PMC

    pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9525998

    The target population is the entire group of people who share a common condition (disease process) or characteristic the researcher is interested in studying (Elfil & Negada, 2017). While the 'accessible population' is the geographically and temporally classified subset that is available for the study participant recruitment (Hulley et al., 2013).

  6. Target Population: What It Is + Strategies for Targeting

    www.questionpro.com/blog/target-population

    A target population is a specific group of individuals that a particular study, program, campaign, or intervention is designed to reach, influence, or study. This group is characterized by certain common attributes or criteria that make it the focus of the effort.

  7. Target population - (Intro to Biostatistics) - Fiveable

    library.fiveable.me/.../target-population

    Definition. The target population refers to the specific group of individuals or subjects that a study aims to investigate or draw conclusions about.

  8. Target Population in Psychology: Definition and Importance

    neurolaunch.com/target-population-definition...

    A target population in psychology is characterized by certain parameters that make it unique and relevant to the study at hand. These could include demographic factors like age, gender, or ethnicity, but they might also encompass psychological traits, behavioral patterns, or shared experiences.