Alternative Paradigms for the Analysis of Imputed Survey Data
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3129034
DOI10.2307/2291636zbMath0869.62015OpenAlexW4243166985MaRDI QIDQ3129034
Publication date: 9 September 1997
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.2307/2291636
estimation efficiencymissing valuesconsistent variance estimationfractionally weighted imputationmultiple imputation variance estimatorRao-Shao variance estimator
Related Items (18)
Semiparametric fractional imputation using empirical likelihood in survey sampling ⋮ Validation likelihood estimation method for a zero-inflated Bernoulli regression model with missing covariates ⋮ Conceptual, computational and inferential benefits of the missing data perspective in applied and theoretical statistical problems ⋮ Fractional imputation for incomplete two-way contingency tables ⋮ Some Variants of Constrained Estimation in Finite Population Sampling ⋮ A unified framework of multiply robust estimation approaches for handling incomplete data ⋮ Estimation of logistic regression with covariates missing separately or simultaneously via multiple imputation methods ⋮ Calibrated imputation of numerical data under linear edit restrictions ⋮ Resampling methods for estimating variance in surveys ⋮ Assessing uncertainty in the American Indian trust fund ⋮ Jackknife empirical likelihood inference with regression imputation and survey data ⋮ Fractional imputation in survey sampling: a comparative review ⋮ Exact balanced random imputation for sample survey data ⋮ Combining Inverse Probability Weighting and Multiple Imputation to Improve Robustness of Estimation ⋮ Multiple Imputation Methods for Treatment Noncompliance and Nonresponse in Randomized Clinical Trials ⋮ Preserving the distribution function in surveys in case of imputation for zero inflated data ⋮ Estimation of a zero-inflated Poisson regression model with missing covariates via nonparametric multiple imputation methods ⋮ Imputation: Methods, Simulation Experiments and Practical Examples
This page was built for publication: Alternative Paradigms for the Analysis of Imputed Survey Data