Population

From AWF-Wiki
Revision as of 11:13, 3 December 2008 by WikiSysop (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

Population and sampling frame

A sampling study starts with a number of questions that refer to a certain domain of interest. That domain is called the population and is defined as the totality of all elements. The number of elements from which a sample should be drawn is called the sampling frame which is a list of all elements that can be selected during sampling (all elements that have a selection probability larger than 0).

In the ideal case the sampling frame contains all elements of a population, however one can imagine reasons for differences of both. It is important to note that both, population and sampling frame, should be clearly defined for any sampling study. Reasons for a sample frame that is smaller as the population is for example, that parts of the population can not be sampled, because they are not accessable. In forest inventories we can imagine that areas with extrem steep slopes can not be sampled. In those cases one should consider to re-define the population.


info.png Note
By means of a sampling study one is able to derive statistical sound estimations for the part of the population that is in the sample frame. If the pupolation is larger than the sample frame, we can not justify any estimations assigned to the whole population.
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Development
Toolbox
Print/export