Estimation of a sensitive proportion by Warner's randomized response data through inverse sampling
From MaRDI portal
Publication:451503
DOI10.1007/s00362-009-0234-8zbMath1247.62014OpenAlexW1968633222MaRDI QIDQ451503
Arijit Chaudhuri, Mausumi Bose, Kajal Dihidar
Publication date: 23 September 2012
Published in: Statistical Papers (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00362-009-0234-8
Related Items (9)
Privacy protection measures for randomized response surveys on stigmatizing continuous variables ⋮ Efficiency comparison of unrelated question models based on same privacy protection degree ⋮ Respondent privacy and estimation efficiency in randomized response surveys for discrete-valued sensitive variables ⋮ Minimax randomized response methods for protecting respondent’s privacy ⋮ Estimation of a sensitive proportion by Warner's randomized response data through inverse sampling ⋮ The uniformly minimum variance unbiased estimator of odds ratio in case-control studies under inverse sampling ⋮ Using prior information in privacy-protecting survey designs for categorical sensitive variables ⋮ Admissible and optimal sampling strategy for estimating finite population mean in randomized response surveys with multiple responses ⋮ Estimation of finite population proportion in randomized response surveys using multiple responses
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Estimating sensitive proportions by Warner's randomized response technique using multiple randomized responses from distinct persons sampled
- Estimation of a sensitive proportion by Warner's randomized response data through inverse sampling
- A generalized randomized response technique
- Estimating sensitive proportions from Warner's randomized responses in alternative ways restricting to only distinct units sampled
- Randomized response in stratified sampling
- Randomized Response: A Survey Technique for Eliminating Evasive Answer Bias
- Some Remarks on Sampling with Replacement
- Asking sensitive questions indirectly
- On Use of Distinct Respondents in Randomized Response Surveys
- A Generalization of Sampling Without Replacement From a Finite Universe
- Using randomized response from a complex survey to estimate a sensitive proportion in a dichotomous finite population
This page was built for publication: Estimation of a sensitive proportion by Warner's randomized response data through inverse sampling