What level of model should we use in small area estimation Seminar
- Date:
- 4 November 2011
- Venue:
- Building 39 Room 3013
For more information regarding this seminar, please email Mrs Jane Revell at j.revell@southampton.ac.uk .
Event details
Methodology seminar
Abstract
If unit-level data are available, Small Area Estimation (SAE) is usually based on models formulated at the unit level, but they are ultimately used to produce estimates at the area level and thus involve cross-level inferences. This paper investigates the circumstances when using an area-level model may be more effective. Linear mixed models fitted using different levels of data are applied in SAE to calculate synthetic estimators and Empirical Best Linear Unbiased Predictors (EBLUPs). The performance of area-level models is compared with unit-level models when both individual and aggregate data are available. A key factor is whether there are substantial contextual effects. Ignoring these effects in unit-level working models can cause biased estimates of regression parameters. The contextual effects can be automatically accounted for in the area-level models approximately. Using synthetic and EBLUP techniques, small area estimates based on different levels of linear mixed models are studied in a simulation study.
Speaker information
David Steel , University of Wollongong. Australia