census method การใช้
- Development of census methods was a necessary corollary.
- All of those estimates were based on traditional census methods using dung samples collected at night nests.
- Graunt, along with William Petty, developed early human statistical and census methods that later provided a framework for modern demography.
- McClellan did not dispute that the Texas office of State-Federal Relations questioned the accuracy of the current census methods in its 1997 report.
- The adjustment will increase the numbers of minority residents _ principally inner-city blacks and rural Hispanics, who are often missed by traditional census methods.
- But Bush spokesman Scott McClellan charged that it is Democrats who are playing politics by trying to use a different census method to gain a political advantage.
- Riche replied in writing on Thursday that " it is fruitless to continue trying to count every last person with traditional census methods of physical enumeration ."
- The birth of statistics is often dated to 1662, when John Graunt, along with William Petty, developed early human statistical and census methods that provided a framework for modern demography.
- That led to a National Academy of Sciences study that recommended sampling, saying : " It is fruitless to continue trying to count every last person with traditional census methods ."
- One would be conducted in Sacramento, Calif ., using statistical sampling and the other would be conducted in rural areas of South Carolina using the traditional house-by-house census method augmented by the mailing of more census forms and a large advertising effort.
- Under the president's proposal, up to 90 percent of the U . S . population would be counted by traditional Census methods, including mail-in questionnaires and visits by U . S . Census Bureau personnel to residents who did not respond to the national survey.
- Sampling, which is an enhanced and more sophisticated version of polling, is presumed to help Democrats in redistricting since it will boost the number of minorities _ mainly blacks in the inner cities and Hispanics in rural areas _ who tend to be missed by tradition census methods.