Dear All,
Following the success of the Environmental Sampling and Monitoring Course held at the Royal Statistical Society in 2006, we are pleased to announce a further date for this one day event. To guarantee a place please confirm your interest asap.
Location: London Mathematical Society, Russell Square, London
Date: Monday 21st May 2007
Cost:
£70 (for university staff and students) includes tea, coffee, lunch and course materials (discounts available for participants from same university/college - £120 for two, £165 for three).
£120 (for non-academics)
Registration:
Contact Brad Payne on 0115 8488410 or email [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
Details:
A One-Day Workshop by Vic Barnett
Synopsis
The collection of representative data for efficient estimation of population characteristics is vital in all areas of statistical enquiry - none more so than in the study of environmental issues. Finite population survey sampling methods (including methods of simple random sampling, stratified sampling and cluster sampling) are well known and are relevant to environmental sampling and monitoring (e.g in environmental health, pollution, water and air quality, environmental change networks, etc). But more modern approaches which depart from the earlier principles of randomness and segregation can yield major advantages for estimating elusive environmental characteristics especially when sample selection and testing is expensive and optimal procedures are thus vital. They also arise in contexts where characteristics of interest are rare in the population or are of a sensitive or confidential nature, or for special fields of application. Specifically the course will present results in these newer fields relating to:
size biasing and reweighting methods
composite sampling and randomised response methods for handling sensitive issues ranked set sampling for high-efficiency inference where sampling costs are very high capture-recapture and transect sampling used widely but in particular for studying wild-life environmental problems involving plants, animals, fisheries, forestry and plants, etc.
Lectures will be augmented by practical examples; the material is given more extensive treatment in:
Barnett, V. (2002) Sample Survey Principles and Methods, Arnold, London Barnett, V. (2004) Environmental Statistics, Wiley, Chichester
Programme (provisional)
09.45 - 10.15 Registration and Welcome
10.15 - 11.15 Session 1: Structured sampling - overview, size biasing, weighting methods
11.15 - 11.30 Morning Coffee
11.30 - 12.30 Session 2: Composite sampling - rare events, some material on standards.
12.30 - 13.30 Lunch
13.30 - 14.30 Session 3: Ranked set sampling -accessibility, economy 14.30 - 14.45 Afternoon Tea
14.45 - 15.45 Session 4: Capture-recapture, transect sampling and adaptive methods
15.45 - 16.15 Discussion and Close
Biopic
Vic Barnett is Professor of Statistics at Nottingham Trent University. He previously served at the Universities of Nottingham, Sheffield, Bath, Western Australia and Manchester and was Head of Biomathematics at Rothamsted. He has pioneered initiatives in environmental statistics such as SPRUCE (Statistics in Public Resources, Utilities and in Care of the Environment) with its major international conferences and volumes in the series Statistics for the Environment (J.Wiley & Co.). He has written and edited more than 20 books on statistical research and methods including the topics of environmental statistics, survey sampling, outliers and inference and published more than 100 research papers.
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