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Auteur
Lisa Daniels is the Hodson Trust Professor Emeritus of Economics at Washington College in Chestertown, Maryland. She specializes in development in Africa, where she worked for 10 years, beginning as a Peace Corps volunteer. During her time in Africa, she studied agricultural markets, market information systems, poverty trends, and micro- and small-scale enterprises. As part of her research on micro- and small-scale enterprises, she directed national surveys of 7,000 to 56,000 households and businesses in Bangladesh, Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, and Zimbabwe funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development. In each survey, she was responsible for the questionnaire design, sample selection, data collection and analysis, and report preparation. Her work from these surveys and other research in Africa and Asia appears in consulting reports and in peer-reviewed journals. In addition to research and fieldwork, she has taught a range of courses over the past 28 years, including a research methods course and a data analysis course that she has taught over 20 times. She has also presented her work related to teaching at more than a dozen workshops.
Nicholas Minot is a Senior Research Fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in Washington, D.C. Since joining IFPRI in 1997, he has carried out research on agricultural market reform, income diversification, spatial patterns in policy, and food price volatility in developing countries. This research often involves carrying out surveys of farmers, cooperatives, traders, and consumers to better understand changes in food marketing systems. In addition to research, he is involved in outreach and capacity-building activities, including offering short courses on the use of Stata for survey data analysis. Before joining IFPRI, he taught at the University of Illinois in UrbanaChampaign, served as a policy adviser in Zimbabwe, and analyzed survey data in Rwanda. Overall, he has worked in more than two dozen countries in Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, North Africa, and Asia.
Texte du rabat
The Second Edition of An Introduction to Statistics and Data Analysis Using Stata®: From Research Design to Final Report provides an integrated approach to methods, statistics, data analysis, and interpretation of results. The book features examples from social science research and news articles along with concise descriptions of statistics, allowing readers to understand the context of data analysis while also learning to communicate the results.
Contenu
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I The Research Process And Data Collection
Chapter 1 A Brief Overview of the Research Process
1.1 Introduction
1.2 What Is Research
1.3 Steps In The Research Process
1.4 Conclusion
Exercises
Chapter 2 Sampling Techniques
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Sample Design
2.3 Selecting A Sample
2.4 Sampling Weights
Exercises
Chapter 3 Questionnaire Design
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Types Of Questionnaires
3.3 Guidelines For Questionnaire Design
3.4 Recording Responses
3.5 Skip Patterns
3.6 Ethical Issues
Exercises
Part II Describing Data
Chapter 4 An Introduction to Stata
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Opening Stata And Stata Windows
4.3 Working With Existing Data
4.4 Setting Preferences In Stata
4.5 Entering Your Own Data Into Stata
4.6 Using Log Files And Saving Your Work
4.7 Getting Help
4.8 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 5 Preparing and Transforming Your Data
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Checking For Outliers
5.3 Creating New Variables
5.4 Missing Values In Stata
5.5 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 6 Descriptive Statistics
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Types Of Variables And Measurement
6.3 Descriptive Statistics For All Types Of Variables: Frequency Tables And Modes
6.4 Descriptive Statistics For Variables Measured As Ordinal, Interval, And Ratio Scales: Median And Percentiles
6.5 Descriptive Statistics For Continuous Variables: Mean, Variance, Standard Deviation, And Coefficient Of Variation
6.6 Descriptive Statistics For Categorical Variables Measured On A Nominal Or Ordinal Scale: Cross Tabulation
6.7 Applying Sampling Weights
6.8 Formatting Output For Use In A Document (Word, Google Docs, Etc.)
6.9 Graphs To Describe Data
6.10 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Part III Testing Hypotheses
Chapter 7 The Normal Distribution, Hypothesis Testing, and Statistical Significance
7.1 Introduction
7.2 The Normal Distribution And Standard Scores
7.3 Sampling Distributions And Standard Errors
7.4 Examining The Theory And Identifying The Research Question And Hypothesis
7.5 Testing For Statistical Significance Between A Sample Mean And A Population Mean
7.6 Rejecting Or Not Rejecting The Null Hypothesis
7.7 Interpreting The Results
7.8 Central Limit Theorem
7.9 Presenting The Results
7.10 Comparing A Sample Proportion To A Population Proportion
7.11 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 8 Testing a Hypothesis About a Single Mean and a Single Proportion
8.1 Introduction
8.2 When To Use The One-Sample t Test
8.3 Calculating The One-Sample t Test
8.4 Conducting A One-Sample t Test
8.5 Interpreting The Output
8.6 Presenting The Results
8.7 Estimating A Population Proportion From A Sample Proportion
8.8 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 9 Testing a Hypothesis About Two Independent Means
9.1 Introduction
9.2 When To Use A Two Independentsamples t Test
9.3 Calculating The t Statistic
9.4 Conducting A t Test
9.5 Interpreting The Output
9.6 Presenting The Results
9.7 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 10 One-Way Analysis of Variance
10.1 Introduction
10.2 When To Use One-Way ANOVA
10.3 Calculating The F Ratio
10.4 Conducting A One-Way ANOVA Test
10.5 Interpreting The Output
10.6 Is One Mean Different or are all of Them Different?
10.7 Presenting The Results
10.8 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 11 Comparing Categorical Variables - The Chi-Squared Test and Proportions
11.1 Introduction
11.2 When To Use The Chi-Squared Test
11.3 Calculating The Chi-Square Statistic
11.4 Conducting A Chi-Squared Test
11.5 Interpreting The Output
11.6 Presenting The Results
11.7 Comparing Proportions Or Binary Categorical Variables
11.8 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Part IV Exploring Relationships
Chapter 12 Linear Regression Analysis
12.1 Introduction
12.2 When To Use Regression Analysis
12.3 Correlation
12.4 Simple Regression Analysis
12.5 Multiple Regression Analysis
12.6 Presenting The Results
12.7 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 13 Regression Diagnostics
13.1 Introduction
13.2 Measurement Error
13.3 Specification Error
13.4 Multicollinearity
13.5 Heteroscedasticity
13.6 Endogeneity
13.7 Nonnormality
13.8 Presenting The Results
13.9 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 14 Regression Analysis with Binary Dependent Variables
14.1 Introduction
14.2 When To Use Logit Or Probit Analysis
14.3 Understanding The Logit Model
14.4 Running A Logit Model
14.5 Interpreting The Results Of A Logit Model
14.6 Logit Versus Probit Regression Models
14.7 Presenting The Results
14.8 Summary Of Commands Used In This Chapter
Exercises
Chapter 15 Introduction to Advanced Topics in Regression Analysis
15.1 Introduction
15.2 Regression With A Categorical Dependent Variable
15.3 Instrumental Variables R…