Faculty of Business Administration
FBE Brown Bag Seminar
Non-Randomly Sampled Networks: Biases and Corrections
Dr. Stanley KO
Assistant Professor, Department of Finance and Business Economics, FBA, University of Macau
Abstract
This paper analyzes statistical issues arising from networks based on non-representative samples of the population. We first characterize the biases in both network statistics and estimates of network effects under non-random sampling theoretically and numerically. Sampled network data systematically bias the properties of observed networks and suffer from non-classical measurement-error problems when applied as regressors. Apart from the sampling rate and the elicitation procedure, these biases depend in a non-trivial way on which subpopulations are missing with higher probability. We propose a methodology, adapting post-stratification weighting approaches to networked contexts, which enables researchers to recover several network-level statistics and reduce the biases in the estimated network effects. The advantages of the proposed methodology are that it can be applied to network data collected via both designed and non-designed sampling procedures, does not require one to assume any network formation model, and is straightforward to implement. We apply our approach to two widely used network data sets and show that accounting for the non-representativeness of the sample dramatically changes the results of regression analysis.
Date: 18 Dec 2019 (Wed)
Time: 15:00-16:00
Venue: E22-2007
The paper can be downloaded from https://www.nber.org/papers/w25270
ALL ARE WELCOME!