In social science research, differences among groups or changes over
time are a common focus of study. While means and variances are
typically the basis for statistical methods used in this research, the
underlying social theory often implies properties of distributions
that are not well captured by these summary measures. Examples include
the current controversies regarding growing inequality in earnings,
racial diferences in test scores, socio-economic correlates of birth
outcomes, and the impact of smoking on survival and health. The
distributional differences that animate the debates in these fields
are complex. They comprise the usual mean-shifts and changes in
variance, but also more subtle comparisons of changes in the upper and
lower tails of distributions. Survey and census data on such
attributes contain a wealth of distributional information, but
traditional methods of data analysis leave much of this information
untapped. In this monograph, we present methods for full comparative
distributional analysis. The methods are based on the relative
distribution, a nonparametric complete summary of the information
required for scale--invariant comparisons between two distributions.
The relative distribution provides a general integrated framework for
analysis. It offers a graphical component that simplifies exploratory
data analysis and display, a statistically valid basis for the
development of hypothesis-driven summary measures, and the potential
for decomposition that enables one to examine complex hypotheses
regarding the origins of distributional changes within and between
groups. The monograph is written for data analysts and those
interested in measurement, and it can serve as a textbook for a course
on distributional methods. The presentation is application oriented,
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780387226583
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter