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Lĩnh vựcPhương pháp luận khảo sátPhương pháp luận khảo sátPhương pháp luận khảo sát
HọProcess / pipelineRegression modelProcess / pipeline
Năm ra đời199019781997
Người khởi xướngSteven ThompsonOtis, Burnham, White & AndersonDouglas Heckathorn
LoạiProbability-based adaptive designProbabilistic population size estimatorProbabilistic chain-referral sampling design
Công trình gốcThompson, S. K. (1990). Adaptive cluster sampling. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 85(412), 1050–1059. 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 ↗Heckathorn, D. D. (1997). Respondent-driven sampling: A new approach to the study of hidden populations. Social Problems, 44(2), 174–199. DOI ↗
Tên gọi khácAdaptive Cluster Sampling, Sequential Adaptive Sampling, Network Sampling, Adaptif Küme ÖrneklemesiMark-Recapture, Tag-Recapture, Mark-Release-Recapture, İşaretle-Yeniden YakalaChain-Referral Sampling, Peer-Referral Sampling, Network-Based Sampling, Katılımcı Güdümlü Örnekleme
Liên quan323
Tóm tắtAdaptive Cluster Sampling (ACS) is a probability-based survey design introduced by Steven K. Thompson in 1990 for estimating the abundance or total of rare, clustered populations. Starting from an initial random sample, the design adaptively adds neighboring units whenever a sampled unit satisfies a predefined condition—such as exceeding a count threshold—thereby concentrating sampling effort exactly where the population of interest occurs. It is most appropriate for ecologists, epidemiologists, and social scientists studying geographically or socially clustered rare phenomena.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.Respondent-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.
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ScholarGateSo sánh phương pháp: Adaptive Sampling · Capture-Recapture · Respondent-Driven Sampling. Truy cập ngày 2026-06-17 từ https://scholargate.app/vi/compare