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Stichprobenziehung mit Befragtenakquisition×Erfassungs-Wiederfang-Populationsschätzung×Geschichtete Stichprobenziehung×Umfragewichtung und Kalibrierung×
FachgebietUmfragemethodikUmfragemethodikUmfragemethodikUmfragemethodik
FamilieProcess / pipelineRegression modelProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Entstehungsjahr1997197819772010
UrheberDouglas HeckathornOtis, Burnham, White & AndersonWilliam G. CochranSharon Lohr
TypProbabilistic chain-referral sampling designProbabilistic population size estimatorProbability-based survey sampling designEstimation adjustment procedure
Wegweisende QuelleHeckathorn, D. D. (1997). Respondent-driven sampling: A new approach to the study of hidden populations. Social Problems, 44(2), 174–199. DOI ↗Otis, D. L., Burnham, K. P., White, G. C., & Anderson, D. R. (1978). Statistical inference from capture data on closed animal populations. Wildlife Monographs, 62, 3–135. link ↗Cochran, W. G. (1977). Sampling Techniques (3rd ed.). Wiley. ISBN: 978-0-471-16240-7Lohr, S. L. (2010). Sampling: Design and Analysis (2nd ed.). Brooks/Cole. ISBN: 978-0-495-10527-5
AliasnamenChain-Referral Sampling, Peer-Referral Sampling, Network-Based Sampling, Katılımcı Güdümlü ÖrneklemeMark-Recapture, Tag-Recapture, Mark-Release-Recapture, İşaretle-Yeniden YakalaProportional Stratified Sampling, Optimal Allocation Sampling, Stratum-Based Sampling, Tabakalı ÖrneklemeSurvey Calibration, Post-Stratification Weighting, Raking Adjustment, Ağırlıklandırma (Anket)
Verwandt3223
ZusammenfassungRespondent-Driven Sampling (RDS) is a probabilistic chain-referral method designed to reach hidden or hard-to-reach populations that lack a sampling frame. Introduced by sociologist Douglas Heckathorn in 1997, RDS combines snowball recruitment with mathematical weighting based on participants' personal network sizes, allowing researchers to generate population-level estimates even when no complete membership list exists.Capture-recapture (also known as mark-recapture) is a statistical method for estimating the size of an unknown population by sampling it twice and tracking which individuals appear in both samples. Formally systematized for closed animal populations by Otis, Burnham, White, and Anderson in their landmark 1978 Wildlife Monographs paper, the method extends naturally to human populations, epidemiology, and incomplete administrative records.Stratified sampling is a probability sampling design in which the target population is partitioned into non-overlapping, exhaustive subgroups called strata, and independent probability samples are drawn within each stratum. Formalized by William G. Cochran in Sampling Techniques (1977), the method exploits known population structure to reduce variance and guarantee representativeness of all major subgroups, making it a cornerstone of large-scale survey research and official statistics.Survey weighting is a statistical procedure that assigns a numeric weight to each sampled unit so that the weighted sample reproduces known population totals. Rooted in classical sampling theory and systematically synthesized by Sharon Lohr (2010), the approach corrects for unequal selection probabilities, unit nonresponse, and coverage gaps, producing estimates that are more representative of the target population than raw sample means or totals would be.
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ScholarGateMethoden vergleichen: Respondent-Driven Sampling · Capture-Recapture · Stratified Sampling · Survey Weighting. Abgerufen am 2026-06-18 von https://scholargate.app/de/compare