45 research outputs found
Pierre D. Thionet. Quelques problemes concemtlnt les sondages. Goettingen : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. 1978. 137pp.
The publication reviewed is number 9 in the series" Applied
Statistics and Econometrics" edited by Gerhard Tintner, Pierre Desire
Truonet, and Heinrich Strecker. The purpose of the series is to publish
papers " too long for ordinary journal articles, but not long enough for
books . ... . . Upon acceptance, speedy publication can be promised".
The abstracts in English, French, and German, usual in this series, are
missing from the copy reviewed. The book consists of ten chapters:
sampling theory; multi -stage sampling and other fundamental problems;
optimum stratification; variances; sampling with replacement and other
theoretical issues; experimental design; information theory; a
posteriori raising factors ; order statistics; Bayesian methods. Such an
ambitious content within 130 pages requires parsimonious presentation.
One chapter has been squeezed into hardly more than four pages. The
chapter on a posteriori raising factors will be useful in developing
countries and particularly when samples do not work out as designed. It
will also be refreshing to those limited to the literature in the
English language
Raymond L. Horton. The General Linear Model, Data Analysis in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. New York: McGraw-Hill International Book Company. 1978. pp.xi + 274.
It is a parsimonious book for the massive material it
contains. Written for advanced students of social and behavioural
sciences, it presents the analytic uses, limitations, and assumptions
underlying the application of five techniques: factorial analysis of
variance designs, latin square designs, repeated measures designs,
analysis of covariance, and general regression analysis. The slimness of
the book is made possible partly by the parsimony of style - a parsimony
which did not impair the clarity of exposition - but mainly by the
unifying factor of the general linear model (GLM)presented in the first
two chapters. In this respect, the work reviewed resembles a 1978 book
on demographic technique of analysis by Guillaume J. Wunsch and Marc G.
Termote (plenum Press). There, too, in introductory chapters the common
elements of cohort analysis and period analysis were first presented in
a general manner and then applied to the four fields of mortality,
nuptiality, natality, and migration. These examples of generalizability
are recommended to expositors of intricacies in our profession. Such
methodological generalizations are a condition of real interdisciplinary
exchanges, of which this journal is a notable example. There is
something genuine about that kind of generalizations in comparison with
the more desperate attempts to generalize about the society so beloved
of recent Ph.Ds
Estimates of the rate of illegal abortion and the effects of eliminating therapeutic abortion, Alberta 1973-74*
Journal ArticleIn the current controversy surrounding abortion, rates of illegal abortion, being difficult to ascertain, seldom inform the debate. We utilize a relatively new survey tool, the randomized response technique (RRT), to estimate rates of illegal abortion in Edmonton, Alberta. A comparison of results obtained by means of the RRT with those obtained by more traditional means reveals that the RRT has the capacity to elicit responses to sensitive questions not possible using other techniques. RM: "Reproduced with permission of the Canadian Public Health Association
Estimates of the rate of illegal abortion and the effects of eliminating therapeutic abortion, Alberta 1973-74*
Journal ArticleIn the current controversy surrounding abortion, rates of illegal abortion, being difficult to ascertain, seldom inform the debate. We utilize a relatively new survey tool, the randomized response technique (RRT), to estimate rates of illegal abortion in Edmonton, Alberta. A comparison of results obtained by means of the RRT with those obtained by more traditional means reveals that the RRT has the capacity to elicit responses to sensitive questions not possible using other techniques
First Release from the Second Population Census of Pakistan, 1961
The field enumeration for the purposes of the Second
Population Census of Pakistan was completed at dawn of February 1, 1961.
The first Bulletin with provisional results is dated 27 days later1. The
less than five weeks in the case of Pakistan compare with about four
weeks in the case of the latest Census of India 2, and just over six
weeks in the case of United Kingdom3. Such figures are seldom directly
comparable, but the least that can be said is that Pakistan is in the
first league. With such standards of performance as to speed already
reached, the need now is to concentrate on increasing the extent of
information provided, ensuring greater comparability, providing some
preliminary analysis and elucidation and finally eliminating clerical
mistakes through more checking. The swift results in Pakistan in the
prevailing communication and literacy circumstances suggest that the
work was well planned and must have been carried out by an exceedingly
efficient organisation