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| Hierarkisk Spørgeskemaundersøgelse× | Multilevelmodellering× | |
|---|---|---|
| Fagområde≠ | Forskningsdesign | Forskningsstatistik |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Oprindelsesår≠ | 1986–1992 (formalization of multilevel methods for nested survey data) | 1992 |
| Ophavsperson≠ | Developed through contributions of Aitkin, Longford, Goldstein, Bryk, and Raudenbush in the 1980s–1990s | Anthony Bryk and Stephen Raudenbush |
| Type≠ | Quantitative survey design with multilevel analysis | Method |
| Oprindelig kilde≠ | Snijders, T. A. B., & Bosker, R. J. (2012). Multilevel Analysis: An Introduction to Basic and Advanced Multilevel Modeling (2nd ed.). Sage. ISBN: 978-1849202015 | Bryk, A. S., & Raudenbush, S. W. (1992). Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications and Data Analysis Methods. SAGE Publications. DOI ↗ |
| Aliasser | multilevel survey research, nested survey design, multilevel survey design, HLM-based survey research | HLM, mixed-effects models, random effects models, MLM |
| Relaterede≠ | 6 | 3 |
| Resumé≠ | Hierarchical survey research is a quantitative design that collects survey data from respondents who are naturally nested within higher-level units — such as students within classrooms, employees within organizations, or patients within hospitals — and uses multilevel (hierarchical linear) modeling to analyze variation at each level simultaneously. It is the standard approach whenever survey data have a clustered structure that would violate the independence assumption of ordinary regression. | Multilevel modeling (also called hierarchical linear modeling, mixed-effects modeling) is a statistical framework for analyzing data organized in nested or clustered structures—students within schools, patients within hospitals, repeated measures within individuals. Developed by Bryk and Raudenbush (1992), it accounts for dependency among observations and partitions variance into levels (within-cluster and between-cluster), enabling valid inference and revealing context effects. Essential in education, medicine, organizational research, and any field where data have natural hierarchies. |
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