Journal of the Royal Statistical Society - Series A

Volume 176, n° 4, October 2013

  • PULLINGER John - Statistics making an impact, pp. 819–840
  • JOHNSTON David W., NICHOLLS Michael E. R., SHAH Manisha, SHIELDS Michael A. - Handedness, health and cognitive development: evidence from children in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, pp. 841–860
  • BÖCKERMAN Petri, BRYSON Alex, ILMAKUNNAS Pekka - Does high involvement management lead to higher pay? pp. 861–885
  • JERRIM John, VIGNOLES Anna - Social mobility, regression to the mean and the cognitive development of high ability children from disadvantaged homes, pp. 887–906
  • FRIMMEL Wolfgang, HALLA Martin, WINTER-EBMER Rudolf - Assortative mating and divorce: evidence from Austrian register data, pp. 907–929
  • GRAHAM Daniel J., McCOY Emma J., STEPHENS David A. - Quantifying the effect of area deprivation on child pedestrian casualties by using longitudinal mixed models to adjust for confounding, interference and spatial dependence, pp. 931–950
  • COCKX Bart, PICCHIO Matteo - Scarring effects of remaining unemployed for long-term unemployed school-leavers, pp. 951–980

(résumés du n° 4/2013)

Volume 176, n° 3, June 2013

  • RARUOLO Paolo, SAISANA Michaela, SALTELLI Andrea - Ratings and rankings: voodoo or science? pp. 609–634
  • JOHNSTONE D. J., JOSE S. Jones, V. R. R., PEAT M. - Measures of the economic value of probabilities of bankruptcy pp. 635–653
  • PAVIA Jose M., LOPEZ-QUILEZ Antonio - Spatial vote redistribution in redrawn polling units, pp. 655–678
  • ANDERSSON Christian, JOHANSSON Per - Social stratification and out-of-school learning, pp. 679–701
  • PERACCHI Franco, ROSSETTI Claudio - The heterogeneous thresholds ordered response model: identification and inference, pp. 703–722
  • KOOP Gary, TOLE Lise - Forecasting the European carbon market, pp. 723–741
  • HASSANI Hossein, SOOFI Abdol S., ZHIGLJAVSKY Anatoly - Predicting inflation dynamics with singular spectrum analysis, pp. 743–760
  • BACKUS Peter, CLIFFORD David - Are big charities becoming more dominant? Cross-sectional and longitudinal perspectives, pp. 761–776
  • NAM Christopher F. H., MUKHERJEE Sach, SCHILK Marco, MUKHERJEE Joybrato - Statistical analysis of varieties of English, pp. 777–793
  • PADDOCK Susan M., SAVITSKY Terrance D. - Bayesian hierarchical semiparametric modelling of longitudinal post-treatment outcomes from open enrolment therapy groups,  pp. 795–808
( résumés du n° 3/2013)

Volume 176, n° 2, February 2013

  • PALOYO Alfredo R. - Editorial: On the orthography of heteros*edasticity, pp. 291–293
  • POPLI Gurleen K. - Gender wage differentials in Mexico: a distributional approach, pp. 295–319
  • SMALLMAN-RAYNOR Matthew, CLIFF Andrew D. - Epidemics in semi-isolated communities: statistical perspectives on acute childhood diseases in English public boarding schools, 1930–1939, pp. 321–346
  • BRANDES Leif, FRANCK Egon, THEILER Philipp - The group size and loyalty of football fans: a two-stage estimation procedure to compare customer potentials across teams, pp. 347–369
  • DE MUNNIK Daniel, ILLING Mark, DUPUIS David - Assessing the accuracy of non-random business conditions surveys: a novel approach, pp. 371–388
  • NEELON Brian, GHOSH Pulak, LOEBS Patrick F. - A spatial Poisson hurdle model for exploring geographic variation in emergency department visits, pp. 389–413
  • FALCARO Milena, PENDLETON Neil, PICKLES Andrew - Analysing censored longitudinal data with non-ignorable missing values: depression in older age, pp. 415–430
  • CHOWDRY Haroon, CRAWFORD Claire, DEARDEN Lorraine, GOODMAN Alissa, VIGNOLES Anna - Widening participation in higher education: analysis using linked administrative data, pp. 431–457
  • HOLLY Sean, PETRELLA Ivan, SANTORO Emiliano - Aggregate fluctuations and the cross-sectional dynamics of firm growth, pp. 459–479
  • BELENKIY Ari - The Master of the Royal Mint: how much money did Isaac Newton save Britain? pp. 481–498
  • FUMAGALLI Laura, LAURIE Heather, LYNN Peter - Experiments with methods to reduce attrition in longitudinal surveys, pp. 499–519
  • LANGEL Matti, TILLE Yves - Variance estimation of the Gini index: revisiting a result several times published, pp. 521–540
  • BLANDEN Jo, GREGG Paul, MACMILLAN Lindsey - Intergenerational persistence in income and social class: the effect of within-group inequality, pp. 541–563
  • TOLLENAAR N., VAN DER HEIJDEN P. G. M. - Which method predicts recidivism best?: a comparison of statistical, machine learning and data mining predictive models, pp. 565–584
  • MARTIN David, COCKINGS Samantha, HARFOOT Andrew - Development of a geographical framework for census workplace data, pp. 585–602
  • BAKER Stuart G., KRAMER Barnett S. - The risky reliance on small surrogate end point studies when planning a large prevention trial, pp. 603–608

(résumés du n° 2/2013)

Volume 176, n° 1, January 2013

  • DURRANT  Gabriele, KREUTER Frauke - Editorial: The use of paradata in social survey research, pp. 1–3

  • IMAI Kosuke, TINGLEY Dustin, YAMAMOTO Teppei - Experimental designs for identifying causal mechanisms, pp. 5–51

  • BEST Nicky, ASHBY Deborah, DUNSTAN Frank, FOREMAN David, McINTOSH Neil - A Bayesian approach to complex clinical diagnoses: a case-study in child abuse, pp. 53–96

  • DORLING Danny - Fairness and the changing fortunes of people in Britain, pp. 97–128

‘The use of paradata in social survey research’

  • OLSON Kristen - Do non-response follow-ups improve or reduce data quality?: a review of the existing literature, pp. 129–145
  • BIEMER Paul P., CHEN Patrick, WANG Kevin - Using level-of-effort paradata in non-response adjustments with application to field surveys, pp. 147–168

  • LUITEN Annemieke, SCHOUTEN Barry - Tailored fieldwork design to increase representative household survey response: an experiment in the Survey of Consumer Satisfaction, pp. 169–189

  • CONRAD Frederick G., BROOME Jessica S., BENKI José R., KREUTER Frauke, GROVES Robert M., VANNETTE David, McCLAIN Colleen - Interviewer speech and the success of survey invitations, pp. 191–210

  • WEST Brady T. - An examination of the quality and utility of interviewer observations in the National Survey of Family Growth, pp. 211–225

  • CASAS-CORDERO C., KREUTER F., WANG Y., BABEY S. - Assessing the measurement error properties of interviewer observations of neighbourhood characteristics, pp. 227–249

  • DURRANT Gabriele B., D'ARRIGO Julia, STEELE Fiona - Analysing interviewer call record data by using a multilevel discrete time event history modelling approach, pp. 251–269

  • COUPER Mick P., KREUTER Frauke - Using paradata to explore item level response times in surveys, pp. 271–286

(résumés  du n° 1/2013)

       

      

  

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