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  2. William Gemmell Cochran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gemmell_Cochran

    William Gemmell Cochran (15 July 1909 – 29 March 1980) was a prominent statistician. He was born in Scotland but spent most of his life in the United States . Cochran studied mathematics at the University of Glasgow and the University of Cambridge .

  3. List of important publications in statistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_important...

    Statistical Methods. Author: George W. Snedecor Publication data: 1937, Collegiate Press Description: One of the first comprehensive texts on statistical methods. Reissued as Statistical Methods Applied to Experiments in Agriculture and Biology in 1940 and then again as Statistical Methods with Cochran, WG in 1967. A classic text.

  4. Design effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design_effect

    Some of the more basic methods include simple random sampling (SRS, with or without replacement) and systematic sampling for getting a fixed sample size. There is also Bernoulli sampling with a random sample size. More advanced techniques such as stratified sampling and cluster sampling can also be designed to be EPSEM. For example, in cluster ...

  5. Cochran's C test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochran's_C_test

    Cochran's test, [1] named after William G. Cochran, is a one-sided upper limit variance outlier statistical test .The C test is used to decide if a single estimate of a variance (or a standard deviation) is significantly larger than a group of variances (or standard deviations) with which the single estimate is supposed to be comparable.

  6. Cochran–Armitage test for trend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochran–Armitage_test_for...

    The Cochran–Armitage test for trend, [1] [2] named for William Cochran and Peter Armitage, is used in categorical data analysis when the aim is to assess for the presence of an association between a variable with two categories and an ordinal variable with k categories.

  7. Survey sampling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survey_sampling

    Bias in surveys is undesirable, but often unavoidable. The major types of bias that may occur in the sampling process are: Non-response bias: When individuals or households selected in the survey sample cannot or will not complete the survey there is the potential for bias to result from this non-response.

  8. Probability-proportional-to-size sampling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Probability-proportional...

    The pps sampling results in a fixed sample size n (as opposed to Poisson sampling which is similar but results in a random sample size with expectancy of n). When selecting items with replacement the selection procedure is to just draw one item at a time (like getting n draws from a multinomial distribution with N elements, each with their own ...

  9. JASP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JASP

    Acceptance Sampling: Methods for acceptance sampling and a quality control setting. Audit : Statistical methods for auditing . The audit module offers planning, selection and evaluation of statistical audit samples , methods for data auditing (e.g., Benford’s law ) and algorithm auditing (e.g., model fairness ).