Skip to content

smishr/Survey.jl

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Survey

Stable Dev Build Status Build Status codecov Milestones

This package is used to study complex survey data. It aims to provide an efficient computing framework for large survey data. All types of survey design are supported by this package.

NOTE: For multistage sampling a single stage approximation is used.1

Installation

]  add Survey

Basic usage

The SurveyDesign constructor can take data corresponding to any type of design. Depending on the keyword arguments passed, the data is processed in order to obtain correct results for the given design.

The following examples show how to create and manipulate different survey designs using the Academic Performance Index dataset for Californian schools.

Constructing a survey design

A survey design can be created by calling the constructor with some keywords, depending on the survey type. Let's create a simple random sample, a stratified sample, a single-stage and a two-stage cluster sample.

julia> apisrs = load_data("apisrs");

julia> srs = SurveyDesign(apisrs; weights=:pw)
SurveyDesign:
data: 200×47 DataFrame
strata: none
cluster: none
popsize: [6190.0, 6190.0, 6190.0    6190.0]
sampsize: [200, 200, 200    200]
weights: [31.0, 31.0, 31.0    31.0]
probs: [0.0323, 0.0323, 0.0323    0.0323]

julia> apistrat = load_data("apistrat");

julia> dstrat = SurveyDesign(apistrat; strata=:stype, weights=:pw)
SurveyDesign:
data: 200×46 DataFrame
strata: stype
    [E, E, E    H]
cluster: none
popsize: [6190.0, 6190.0, 6190.0    6190.0]
sampsize: [200, 200, 200    200]
weights: [44.2, 44.2, 44.2    15.1]
probs: [0.0226, 0.0226, 0.0226    0.0662]

julia> apiclus1 = load_data("apiclus1");

julia> dclus1 = SurveyDesign(apiclus1; clusters=:dnum, weights=:pw)
SurveyDesign:
data: 183×46 DataFrame
strata: none
cluster: dnum
    [637, 637, 637    448]
popsize: [6190.0, 6190.0, 6190.0    6190.0]
sampsize: [15, 15, 15    15]
weights: [33.8, 33.8, 33.8    33.8]
probs: [0.0295, 0.0295, 0.0295    0.0295]

julia> apiclus2 = load_data("apiclus2");

julia> dclus2 = SurveyDesign(apiclus2; clusters=[:dnum, :snum], weights=:pw)
SurveyDesign:
data: 126×47 DataFrame
strata: none
cluster: dnum
    [15, 63, 83    795]
popsize: [5130.0, 5130.0, 5130.0    5130.0]
sampsize: [40, 40, 40    40]
weights: [18.9, 18.9, 18.9    18.9]
probs: [0.0528, 0.0528, 0.0528    0.0528]

Using these designs we can compute estimates of statistics such as mean and population total. The designs must first be resampled using bootstrapping in order to compute the standard errors.

julia> bootsrs = bootweights(srs; replicates=1000)
ReplicateDesign{BootstrapReplicates}:
data: 200×1047 DataFrame
strata: none
cluster: none
popsize: [6190.0, 6190.0, 6190.0    6190.0]
sampsize: [200, 200, 200    200]
weights: [31.0, 31.0, 31.0    31.0]
allprobs: [0.0323, 0.0323, 0.0323    0.0323]
type: bootstrap
replicates: 1000

julia> mean(:api00, bootsrs)
1×2 DataFrame
 Row │ mean     SE
     │ Float64  Float64
─────┼──────────────────
   1656.585   9.5409

julia> total(:enroll, bootsrs)
1×2 DataFrame
 Row │ total      SE
     │ Float64    Float64
─────┼──────────────────────
   13.62107e6  1.72846e5

Now we know the mean academic performance index from the year 2000 and the total number of students enrolled in the sampled Californian schools. We can also calculate the statistic of multiple variables in one go...

julia> mean([:api99, :api00], bootsrs)
2×3 DataFrame
 Row │ names   mean     SE
     │ String  Float64  Float64
─────┼──────────────────────────
   1 │ api99   624.685  9.84669
   2 │ api00   656.585  9.5409

... and we can also calculate domain estimates:

julia> total(:enroll, :cname, bootsrs)
38×3 DataFrame
 Row │ cname            total           SE
     │ String15         Float64         Any
─────┼────────────────────────────────────────────
   1 │ Kern                  1.95823e5  74731.2
   2 │ Los Angeles      867129.0        1.36622e5
   3 │ Orange                1.68786e5  63858.0
   4 │ San Luis Obispo    6720.49       6790.49
                              
  35 │ Calaveras         12976.4        13241.6
  36 │ Napa              39239.0        30181.9
  37 │ Lake               6410.79       6986.29
  38 │ Merced            15392.1        15202.2
                                   30 rows omitted

This gives us the total number of enrolled students in each county.

All functionalities are supported by each design type.

Goals

We want to implement all the features provided by the Survey package in R in a Julia-native way. The main goal is to have a complete package that provides a large range of functionality and takes efficiency into consideration for large surveys to be analysed fast.

The milestones section of the repository contains a list of features that contributors can implement in the short-term. Please see contributing guidelines on how to contribute to the project.

Support

We gratefully acknowledge the JuliaLab at MIT for financial support for this project.

References

Footnotes

  1. Lumley, Thomas. Complex surveys: a guide to analysis using R. John Wiley & Sons, 2011. Page 44

About

Analysis of complex surveys

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Julia 100.0%