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Muestreo Ponderado de Casos Típicos×Muestreo Ponderado×
CampoMetodología de encuestasMetodología de encuestas
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen1990s–2000s (as a mixed-methods extension)1940s–1952 (formalized in large-scale government survey work and the Horvitz-Thompson estimator)
Autor originalDerived from Patton's typical case sampling (1990) combined with classical survey weighting principlesMorris H. Hansen, William N. Hurwitz; D. G. Horvitz and D. J. Thompson (theoretical framework)
TipoPurposive sampling with probability weightingProbability sampling design
Fuente seminalPatton, M. Q. (2002). Qualitative Research and Evaluation Methods (3rd ed.). Sage. pp. 236–238 (typical case sampling). ISBN: 978-0761919711Cochran, W. G. (1977). Sampling Techniques (3rd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN: 978-0471162407
Aliasweighted purposive typical sampling, probability-weighted typical case selection, typical case sampling with weighting, weighted representative case samplingprobability proportional to size sampling, PPS sampling, unequal probability sampling, importance sampling
Relacionados66
ResumenWeighted typical case sampling combines the purposive logic of typical case selection — choosing cases that represent the modal, average, or most common profile of a population — with post-selection probability weighting. The result is a sample that is both substantively representative (cases reflect the norm) and statistically corrected for differential selection probabilities or population structure. It is used in mixed-methods and survey research where depth of typical examples matters alongside inferential accuracy.Weighted sampling is a probability-based design in which units are selected with unequal probabilities proportional to a known auxiliary measure of size or importance. Sampling weights — the inverse of inclusion probabilities — are applied during analysis so that each sampled unit correctly represents the population units it stands for. The approach underpins large-scale government, health, and social surveys where simple random sampling would be inefficient.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Weighted Typical Case Sampling · Weighted Sampling. Recuperado el 2026-06-17 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare