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Multilingual Demographic Dictionary, second unified edition, English volume

Difference between revisions of "Population parameter"

Multilingual Demographic Dictionary, second unified edition, English vol.
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(Etienne van de Walle et al., second 1982 edition)
(Etienne van de Walle et al., second 1982 edition)
 
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[[en-II:population parameter]] [[ar-II:معلم احصائي]] [[cs-II:statistický parametr]] [[de-II:Parameter der Grundgesamtheit]] [[es-II:parámetro estadístico]] [[fr-II:paramètre statistique]] [[it-II:parametro statistico]] [[ja-II:母集団母数(パラメーター)]] [[pt-II:parâmetro de população ]] [[ru-II:Параметр]] [[zh-II:人口参数]]  
 
[[en-II:population parameter]] [[ar-II:معلم احصائي]] [[cs-II:statistický parametr]] [[de-II:Parameter der Grundgesamtheit]] [[es-II:parámetro estadístico]] [[fr-II:paramètre statistique]] [[it-II:parametro statistico]] [[ja-II:母集団母数(パラメーター)]] [[pt-II:parâmetro de população ]] [[ru-II:Параметр]] [[zh-II:人口参数]]  
 
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[[Category:Term of the second edition of the multilingual demographic Dictionary]]
 
[[Category:Term of the second edition of the multilingual demographic Dictionary]]

Latest revision as of 06:13, 5 February 2010

Population parameter  (POPULATION parameter)


A population parameter 1 is a numerical value that characterizes a population. Statistical estimation 2 is the name given to the procedure by which the values of such parameters are estimated from the sample. Such estimates are subject to sampling errors 3 and a measure of the magnitude of the sampling error is generally given by the standard error 4. Sometimes a confidence interval 5 is associated with an estimate to show the limits within which the estimated quantity may be expected to lie with a pre-determined probability. A difference between two values is referred to as a significant difference 6 when the probability that it is due to chance is less than a given value which is called the level of significance 7. Thus a difference would be significant at the 5 percent level if the probability that it could have arisen by chance is less than 0.05. In addition to sampling errors, observation errors 8 or response errors 8 also affect estimates. These errors usually include interviewer biases 9 which are systematic errors introduced by the interviewers when the basic data are collected.

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