Abstract

The discussion in Chapter 7 dealt with the fact that sometimes random samples represent the populations from which they are drawn very accurately and sometimes they don’t. Random selection is no guarantee of representativeness. Random sample selection does, however, make it possible to apply some very powerful tools for assessing how likely it is that a sample is unrepresentative to a particular degree. This is because, with random samples, we can say something about how often particular degrees of unrepresentativeness occur on average.KeywordsRandom SampleRepeated TrialInaccurate EstimateInaccurate ResultTrue PopulationThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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