ScholarGate
Asistent

Compară metode

Examinează metodele selectate una lângă alta; rândurile care diferă sunt evidențiate.

Eșantionare inversă×Eșantionarea cu seturi ordonate×Analiză Secvențială (Design Grupal Secvențial)×
DomeniuEșantionareEșantionareStatistică
FamilieProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineHypothesis test
Anul apariției194519521977
Autorul originalJohn Burdon Sanderson HaldaneGlenn A. McIntyreP. C. O'Brien & T. R. Fleming; P. C. Pocock
TipSequential sampling methodSampling design methodologySequential / adaptive hypothesis test
Sursa seminalăHaldane, J. B. S. (1945). On a method of estimating frequencies. Biometrika, 33(3), 222–224. DOI ↗McIntyre, G. A. (1952). A method for unbiased selective sampling using ranked sets. Australian Journal of Agricultural Research, 3(4), 385–390. DOI ↗O'Brien, P.C. & Fleming, T.R. (1979). A Multiple Testing Procedure for Clinical Trials. Biometrics, 35(3), 549–556. DOI ↗
Denumiri alternativeSequential SamplingRSSsequential testing, group sequential design, interim analysis, Sıralı Analiz (Sequential Testing / Group Sequential Design)
Înrudite345
RezumatInverse Sampling is a sequential sampling strategy where sampling continues until a fixed number of occurrences of a rare event or item of interest is observed. Introduced by J. B. S. Haldane in 1945, it is particularly efficient for estimating rare event probabilities or proportions when the target is sparse and costly to detect.Ranked Set Sampling (RSS) is a data collection method introduced by G. A. McIntyre in 1952 that improves estimation efficiency when visual ranking of units is easier or cheaper than actual measurement. By deliberately selecting and measuring units that are ranked as most likely to yield desired outcomes, RSS reduces variance compared to simple random sampling while maintaining unbiasedness.Sequential analysis is a framework for conducting hypothesis tests with pre-planned interim looks at accumulating data, allowing a study to stop early for efficacy or futility while controlling the overall Type I error rate. The group sequential approach was formalised by Pocock (1977) and O'Brien and Fleming (1979), and remains the standard for confirmatory clinical trials and rigorous A/B experiments.
ScholarGateSet de date
  1. v1
  2. 3 Surse
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 3 Surse
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Surse
  3. PUBLISHED

Mergi la căutare Descarcă prezentarea

ScholarGateCompară metode: Inverse Sampling · Ranked Set Sampling · Sequential Analysis. Preluat la 2026-06-15 de pe https://scholargate.app/ro/compare