comparison of variance estimators for two-dimensional, spatially-structured sample designs

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Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two- dimensional, Spatially- structured Sample Designs. Don L. Stevens, Jr. Susan F. Hornsby* Department of Statistics Oregon State University

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Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs. Don L. Stevens, Jr. Susan F. Hornsby* Department of Statistics Oregon State University. Designs and Models for. Aquatic Resource Surveys. DAMARS. R82-9096-01. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured

Sample Designs.

Don L. Stevens, Jr.

Susan F. Hornsby*

Department of Statistics

Oregon State University

Page 2: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

The research described in this presentation has been funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection

Agency through the STAR Cooperative Agreement CR82-9096-01 Program on Designs and Models

for Aquatic Resource Surveys at Oregon State University. It has not been subjected to the Agency's

review and therefore does not necessarily reflect the views of the Agency, and no official endorsement

should be inferred

R82-9096-01

Page 3: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Preview

• Widely accepted that a more or less regular pattern of points (e.g., systematic sampling) is more efficient than SRS

• A variety of variance estimators for estimated mean are available for 1-dimensional systematic sampling

• We will examine the behavior of some variance estimators for 2-dimensional systematic and spatially-balanced (not necessarily regular) designs

Page 4: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators

• Wolter (1985) identified eight 1-dimensional variance estimators for 1-dimensional systematic sampling

• D’Orazio (2003) extended three of these to 2-dimensional systematic sampling

• Stevens & Olsen (2003) developed an estimator for 2-dimensional spatially-balanced samples

Page 5: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Simulation Study

• D’Orazio used simulation to compare estimators on a lattice generated from a Gaussian random field using several covariance functions– 32 x 32 lattice– Calculated variance estimator for all 16

possible 8 x 8 samples– Generated the random field using the Gaussian

Random Field package in R

Page 6: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

05

10

15

20

25

30

xg

yg

Page 7: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

05

10

15

20

25

30

xg

yg

Page 8: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Simulation Study

• Replicate D’Orazio’s study for the exponential covariance model, with the addition of the NBH estimator

• Check the behavior of the estimators on a spatially-patterned surface that is not stationary.

Page 9: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators

• Simplest approach: assume SRS:

n

sfpcVSRS

2

ˆ

N

nNfpc

Page 10: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators

• Horizontal stratification

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

05

10

15

20

25

30

2/

1

21222)(

1)(ˆ

n

jjjhs yy

nfpcV

Page 11: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators

• Vertical stratification

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

05

10

15

20

25

30

2/

1

21222)(

1)(ˆ

n

jjjvs yy

nfpcV

Page 12: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators

• 1st Order autocorrelation correction– 1-dimension

, the Durbin-

Watson

statistic

SRSw

ac VD

V ˆ2

ˆ

n

jj

n

jjj

w

yy

yy

D

1

2

1

1

21

)(

)(

1

1

21 )(

)1(2

1)(ˆ

n

jjjac yy

nnfpcV

Page 13: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators• 1st Order autocorrelation correction

– 2-dimension

, Geary’s c index of

spatial autocorrelation

1 if and are neighbors

0, otherwise

j k

jk

y y

2

1

1

2

2

)(

s

yy

cn

j

n

jkjk

n

j

n

jkjkkj

g

SRSgac VcV ˆˆ

Page 14: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators

• Cochran’s Autocorrelation Correction– 1-dimension

ˆ ˆcac SRSV wV

otherwise

ρw

,1

0ˆ ),1ˆ/1/(2)ˆln(/21

1 lagat ation autocorrel estimates

Page 15: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Variance Estimators

• Cochran’s Autocorrelation Correction– 2-dimension

– Use Moran’s I in place of in formula for w

ˆ ˆcac SRSV wV

1

1

( )( )

ˆ( 1)

n n

j k jkj k j

n n

jk SRSj k j

n y y y y

I

n V

Page 16: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Stevens & Olsen NeighborhoodEstimator

• General form for variable probability, continuous population

2

2

1

1ˆ1 i i

j kNBH ij ik

n i j D k Dj k

i

y yV w w

Di is the set of neighbors for point i

Page 17: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Stevens & Olsen NeighborhoodEstimator

Weights are chosen so that

Weights are a decreasing function of distance, and vanish outside of local neighborhood

1 1

1n n

ij iji j

w w

and wij =0 for jDi

Page 18: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Stevens & Olsen NeighborhoodEstimator

• For constant probability, finite population

2

2

1ˆ ( )i i

NBH ij j ik ki j D k D

V fpc w y w yn

Page 19: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

05

10

15

20

25

30

xg

yg

Page 20: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

grf.sim[, , i] Y

Z

grf.sim[, , i] Y

Z

grf.sim[, , i] Y

Z

grf.sim[, , i] Y

ZGaussian Random Fields

Page 21: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

X

YZ

X + Y

Page 22: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

X

YZ

N(0.25,0.075) * N(0.25,0.1)

Page 23: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

X

Y

xy[,1]^2 + xy[,2]^2 -xy[,1] -xy[,2] +.1* cos(20*xy[,1]) + 0.1*sin(15*xy[,2]) +1.5

Page 24: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

z.ptch32.ary[, , i]

Y

Z

z.ptch32.ary[, , i]

Y

Z

z.ptch32.ary[, , i]

Y

Z

z.ptch32.ary[, , i]

Y

ZPatchy Surfaces

Page 25: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Result GRF cv=1-exp(-2x)

Mean Bias 95% Coverage

VSRS 0.011834 0.00801 0.99943

Vsh 0.005722 0.00190 0.97706

Vsv 0.005728 0.00190 0.978625

Vac 0.005709 0.00189 0.982000

Vcac 0.001436 -0.0023 0.788187

VNBH 0.004949 0.00113 0.973062

Page 26: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Result GRF cv=1-exp(-0.5x)

Mean Bias 95% Coverage

VSRS 0.01448 0.00693 0.99356

Vsh 0.01275 0.00521 0.98719

Vsv 0.01270 0.00515 0.98731

Vac 0.01270 0.00515 0.98881

Vcac 0.00626 -0.0013 0.89950

VNBH 0.00992 0.00238 0.97681

Page 27: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0

0.85

0.90

0.95

1.00

CV Parameter

Cov

erag

e

srs

shsv

ac

cac

nbh

Page 28: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Results Patchy Surface

Mean Bias 95% Coverage

VSRS 0.00087 0.00058 0.99950

Vsh 0.00040 0.00011 0.95796

Vsv 0.00032 0.00002 0.93487

Vac 0.00036 0.00006 0.96290

Vcac 0.00009 -0.0002 0.74199

VNBH 0.00033 0.00003 0.95408

Page 29: Comparison of Variance Estimators for Two-dimensional, Spatially-structured Sample Designs

Conclusions

• The hs, vs, ac, and nbh estimators all seem to work reasonably well for both the GRF and patchy surfaces

• The nbh estimator seems to give coverages that are a bit closer to nominal than the hs, vs, or ac estimators

• The nbh works for variable probability, spatially constrained designs for which the other estimators do not.