11 datasets found
  1. Data for "To Pre-Filter, or Not to Pre-Filter, That Is the Query: A...

    • figshare.com
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    Updated Jun 1, 2023
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    Heather Cribbs; Gabriel Gardner (2023). Data for "To Pre-Filter, or Not to Pre-Filter, That Is the Query: A Multi-Campus Big Data Study" [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.19071578.v1
    Explore at:
    pdfAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 1, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Figsharehttp://figshare.com/
    Authors
    Heather Cribbs; Gabriel Gardner
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Five files, one of which is a ZIP archive, containing data that support the findings of this study. PDF file "IA screenshots CSU Libraries search config" contains screenshots captured from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine for all 24 CalState libraries' homepages for years 2017 - 2019. Excel file "CCIHE2018-PublicDataFile" contains Carnegie Classifications data from the Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research for all of the CalState campuses from 2018. CSV file "2017-2019_RAW" contains the raw data exported from Ex Libris Primo Analytics (OBIEE) for all 24 CalState libraries for calendar years 2017 - 2019. CSV file "clean_data" contains the cleaned data from Primo Analytics which was used for all subsequent analysis such as charting and import into SPSS for statistical testing. ZIP archive file "NonparametricStatisticalTestsFromSPSS" contains 23 SPSS files [.spv format] reporting the results of testing conducted in SPSS. This archive includes things such as normality check, descriptives, and Kruskal-Wallis H-test results.

  2. i

    Household Health Survey 2012-2013, Economic Research Forum (ERF)...

    • catalog.ihsn.org
    • datacatalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Jun 26, 2017
    + more versions
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    Central Statistical Organization (CSO) (2017). Household Health Survey 2012-2013, Economic Research Forum (ERF) Harmonization Data - Iraq [Dataset]. https://catalog.ihsn.org/index.php/catalog/6937
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 26, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    Economic Research Forum
    Kurdistan Regional Statistics Office (KRSO)
    Central Statistical Organization (CSO)
    Time period covered
    2012 - 2013
    Area covered
    Iraq
    Description

    Abstract

    The harmonized data set on health, created and published by the ERF, is a subset of Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2012. It was derived from the household, individual and health modules, collected in the context of the above mentioned survey. The sample was then used to create a harmonized health survey, comparable with the Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2007 micro data set.

    ----> Overview of the Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2012:

    Iraq is considered a leader in household expenditure and income surveys where the first was conducted in 1946 followed by surveys in 1954 and 1961. After the establishment of Central Statistical Organization, household expenditure and income surveys were carried out every 3-5 years in (1971/ 1972, 1976, 1979, 1984/ 1985, 1988, 1993, 2002 / 2007). Implementing the cooperation between CSO and WB, Central Statistical Organization (CSO) and Kurdistan Region Statistics Office (KRSO) launched fieldwork on IHSES on 1/1/2012. The survey was carried out over a full year covering all governorates including those in Kurdistan Region.

    The survey has six main objectives. These objectives are:

    1. Provide data for poverty analysis and measurement and monitor, evaluate and update the implementation Poverty Reduction National Strategy issued in 2009.
    2. Provide comprehensive data system to assess household social and economic conditions and prepare the indicators related to the human development.
    3. Provide data that meet the needs and requirements of national accounts.
    4. Provide detailed indicators on consumption expenditure that serve making decision related to production, consumption, export and import.
    5. Provide detailed indicators on the sources of households and individuals income.
    6. Provide data necessary for formulation of a new consumer price index number.

    The raw survey data provided by the Statistical Office were then harmonized by the Economic Research Forum, to create a comparable version with the 2006/2007 Household Socio Economic Survey in Iraq. Harmonization at this stage only included unifying variables' names, labels and some definitions. See: Iraq 2007 & 2012- Variables Mapping & Availability Matrix.pdf provided in the external resources for further information on the mapping of the original variables on the harmonized ones, in addition to more indications on the variables' availability in both survey years and relevant comments.

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage: Covering a sample of urban, rural and metropolitan areas in all the governorates including those in Kurdistan Region.

    Analysis unit

    1- Household/family. 2- Individual/person.

    Universe

    The survey was carried out over a full year covering all governorates including those in Kurdistan Region.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    ----> Design:

    Sample size was (25488) household for the whole Iraq, 216 households for each district of 118 districts, 2832 clusters each of which includes 9 households distributed on districts and governorates for rural and urban.

    ----> Sample frame:

    Listing and numbering results of 2009-2010 Population and Housing Survey were adopted in all the governorates including Kurdistan Region as a frame to select households, the sample was selected in two stages: Stage 1: Primary sampling unit (blocks) within each stratum (district) for urban and rural were systematically selected with probability proportional to size to reach 2832 units (cluster). Stage two: 9 households from each primary sampling unit were selected to create a cluster, thus the sample size of total survey clusters was 25488 households distributed on the governorates, 216 households in each district.

    ----> Sampling Stages:

    In each district, the sample was selected in two stages: Stage 1: based on 2010 listing and numbering frame 24 sample points were selected within each stratum through systematic sampling with probability proportional to size, in addition to the implicit breakdown urban and rural and geographic breakdown (sub-district, quarter, street, county, village and block). Stage 2: Using households as secondary sampling units, 9 households were selected from each sample point using systematic equal probability sampling. Sampling frames of each stages can be developed based on 2010 building listing and numbering without updating household lists. In some small districts, random selection processes of primary sampling may lead to select less than 24 units therefore a sampling unit is selected more than once , the selection may reach two cluster or more from the same enumeration unit when it is necessary.

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

    Research instrument

    ----> Preparation:

    The questionnaire of 2006 survey was adopted in designing the questionnaire of 2012 survey on which many revisions were made. Two rounds of pre-test were carried out. Revision were made based on the feedback of field work team, World Bank consultants and others, other revisions were made before final version was implemented in a pilot survey in September 2011. After the pilot survey implemented, other revisions were made in based on the challenges and feedbacks emerged during the implementation to implement the final version in the actual survey.

    ----> Questionnaire Parts:

    The questionnaire consists of four parts each with several sections: Part 1: Socio – Economic Data: - Section 1: Household Roster - Section 2: Emigration - Section 3: Food Rations - Section 4: housing - Section 5: education - Section 6: health - Section 7: Physical measurements - Section 8: job seeking and previous job

    Part 2: Monthly, Quarterly and Annual Expenditures: - Section 9: Expenditures on Non – Food Commodities and Services (past 30 days). - Section 10 : Expenditures on Non – Food Commodities and Services (past 90 days). - Section 11: Expenditures on Non – Food Commodities and Services (past 12 months). - Section 12: Expenditures on Non-food Frequent Food Stuff and Commodities (7 days). - Section 12, Table 1: Meals Had Within the Residential Unit. - Section 12, table 2: Number of Persons Participate in the Meals within Household Expenditure Other Than its Members.

    Part 3: Income and Other Data: - Section 13: Job - Section 14: paid jobs - Section 15: Agriculture, forestry and fishing - Section 16: Household non – agricultural projects - Section 17: Income from ownership and transfers - Section 18: Durable goods - Section 19: Loans, advances and subsidies - Section 20: Shocks and strategy of dealing in the households - Section 21: Time use - Section 22: Justice - Section 23: Satisfaction in life - Section 24: Food consumption during past 7 days

    Part 4: Diary of Daily Expenditures: Diary of expenditure is an essential component of this survey. It is left at the household to record all the daily purchases such as expenditures on food and frequent non-food items such as gasoline, newspapers…etc. during 7 days. Two pages were allocated for recording the expenditures of each day, thus the roster will be consists of 14 pages.

    Cleaning operations

    ----> Raw Data:

    Data Editing and Processing: To ensure accuracy and consistency, the data were edited at the following stages: 1. Interviewer: Checks all answers on the household questionnaire, confirming that they are clear and correct. 2. Local Supervisor: Checks to make sure that questions has been correctly completed. 3. Statistical analysis: After exporting data files from excel to SPSS, the Statistical Analysis Unit uses program commands to identify irregular or non-logical values in addition to auditing some variables. 4. World Bank consultants in coordination with the CSO data management team: the World Bank technical consultants use additional programs in SPSS and STAT to examine and correct remaining inconsistencies within the data files. The software detects errors by analyzing questionnaire items according to the expected parameter for each variable.

    ----> Harmonized Data:

    • The SPSS package is used to harmonize the Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2007 with Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2012.
    • The harmonization process starts with raw data files received from the Statistical Office.
    • A program is generated for each dataset to create harmonized variables.
    • Data is saved on the household and individual level, in SPSS and then converted to STATA, to be disseminated.

    Response rate

    Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) reached a total of 25488 households. Number of households refused to response was 305, response rate was 98.6%. The highest interview rates were in Ninevah and Muthanna (100%) while the lowest rates were in Sulaimaniya (92%).

  3. H

    Current Population Survey (CPS)

    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    • search.dataone.org
    Updated May 30, 2013
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    Anthony Damico (2013). Current Population Survey (CPS) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/AK4FDD
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    May 30, 2013
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Anthony Damico
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    analyze the current population survey (cps) annual social and economic supplement (asec) with r the annual march cps-asec has been supplying the statistics for the census bureau's report on income, poverty, and health insurance coverage since 1948. wow. the us census bureau and the bureau of labor statistics ( bls) tag-team on this one. until the american community survey (acs) hit the scene in the early aughts (2000s), the current population survey had the largest sample size of all the annual general demographic data sets outside of the decennial census - about two hundred thousand respondents. this provides enough sample to conduct state- and a few large metro area-level analyses. your sample size will vanish if you start investigating subgroups b y state - consider pooling multiple years. county-level is a no-no. despite the american community survey's larger size, the cps-asec contains many more variables related to employment, sources of income, and insurance - and can be trended back to harry truman's presidency. aside from questions specifically asked about an annual experience (like income), many of the questions in this march data set should be t reated as point-in-time statistics. cps-asec generalizes to the united states non-institutional, non-active duty military population. the national bureau of economic research (nber) provides sas, spss, and stata importation scripts to create a rectangular file (rectangular data means only person-level records; household- and family-level information gets attached to each person). to import these files into r, the parse.SAScii function uses nber's sas code to determine how to import the fixed-width file, then RSQLite to put everything into a schnazzy database. you can try reading through the nber march 2012 sas importation code yourself, but it's a bit of a proc freak show. this new github repository contains three scripts: 2005-2012 asec - download all microdata.R down load the fixed-width file containing household, family, and person records import by separating this file into three tables, then merge 'em together at the person-level download the fixed-width file containing the person-level replicate weights merge the rectangular person-level file with the replicate weights, then store it in a sql database create a new variable - one - in the data table 2012 asec - analysis examples.R connect to the sql database created by the 'download all microdata' progr am create the complex sample survey object, using the replicate weights perform a boatload of analysis examples replicate census estimates - 2011.R connect to the sql database created by the 'download all microdata' program create the complex sample survey object, using the replicate weights match the sas output shown in the png file below 2011 asec replicate weight sas output.png statistic and standard error generated from the replicate-weighted example sas script contained in this census-provided person replicate weights usage instructions document. click here to view these three scripts for more detail about the current population survey - annual social and economic supplement (cps-asec), visit: the census bureau's current population survey page the bureau of labor statistics' current population survey page the current population survey's wikipedia article notes: interviews are conducted in march about experiences during the previous year. the file labeled 2012 includes information (income, work experience, health insurance) pertaining to 2011. when you use the current populat ion survey to talk about america, subract a year from the data file name. as of the 2010 file (the interview focusing on america during 2009), the cps-asec contains exciting new medical out-of-pocket spending variables most useful for supplemental (medical spending-adjusted) poverty research. confidential to sas, spss, stata, sudaan users: why are you still rubbing two sticks together after we've invented the butane lighter? time to transition to r. :D

  4. ODM Data Analysis—A tool for the automatic validation, monitoring and...

    • plos.figshare.com
    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    mp4
    Updated May 31, 2023
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    Tobias Johannes Brix; Philipp Bruland; Saad Sarfraz; Jan Ernsting; Philipp Neuhaus; Michael Storck; Justin Doods; Sonja Ständer; Martin Dugas (2023). ODM Data Analysis—A tool for the automatic validation, monitoring and generation of generic descriptive statistics of patient data [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0199242
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    mp4Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 31, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOShttp://plos.org/
    Authors
    Tobias Johannes Brix; Philipp Bruland; Saad Sarfraz; Jan Ernsting; Philipp Neuhaus; Michael Storck; Justin Doods; Sonja Ständer; Martin Dugas
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    IntroductionA required step for presenting results of clinical studies is the declaration of participants demographic and baseline characteristics as claimed by the FDAAA 801. The common workflow to accomplish this task is to export the clinical data from the used electronic data capture system and import it into statistical software like SAS software or IBM SPSS. This software requires trained users, who have to implement the analysis individually for each item. These expenditures may become an obstacle for small studies. Objective of this work is to design, implement and evaluate an open source application, called ODM Data Analysis, for the semi-automatic analysis of clinical study data.MethodsThe system requires clinical data in the CDISC Operational Data Model format. After uploading the file, its syntax and data type conformity of the collected data is validated. The completeness of the study data is determined and basic statistics, including illustrative charts for each item, are generated. Datasets from four clinical studies have been used to evaluate the application’s performance and functionality.ResultsThe system is implemented as an open source web application (available at https://odmanalysis.uni-muenster.de) and also provided as Docker image which enables an easy distribution and installation on local systems. Study data is only stored in the application as long as the calculations are performed which is compliant with data protection endeavors. Analysis times are below half an hour, even for larger studies with over 6000 subjects.DiscussionMedical experts have ensured the usefulness of this application to grant an overview of their collected study data for monitoring purposes and to generate descriptive statistics without further user interaction. The semi-automatic analysis has its limitations and cannot replace the complex analysis of statisticians, but it can be used as a starting point for their examination and reporting.

  5. H

    Health and Retirement Study (HRS)

    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    • search.dataone.org
    Updated May 30, 2013
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    Anthony Damico (2013). Health and Retirement Study (HRS) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/ELEKOY
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    May 30, 2013
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Anthony Damico
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    analyze the health and retirement study (hrs) with r the hrs is the one and only longitudinal survey of american seniors. with a panel starting its third decade, the current pool of respondents includes older folks who have been interviewed every two years as far back as 1992. unlike cross-sectional or shorter panel surveys, respondents keep responding until, well, death d o us part. paid for by the national institute on aging and administered by the university of michigan's institute for social research, if you apply for an interviewer job with them, i hope you like werther's original. figuring out how to analyze this data set might trigger your fight-or-flight synapses if you just start clicking arou nd on michigan's website. instead, read pages numbered 10-17 (pdf pages 12-19) of this introduction pdf and don't touch the data until you understand figure a-3 on that last page. if you start enjoying yourself, here's the whole book. after that, it's time to register for access to the (free) data. keep your username and password handy, you'll need it for the top of the download automation r script. next, look at this data flowchart to get an idea of why the data download page is such a righteous jungle. but wait, good news: umich recently farmed out its data management to the rand corporation, who promptly constructed a giant consolidated file with one record per respondent across the whole panel. oh so beautiful. the rand hrs files make much of the older data and syntax examples obsolete, so when you come across stuff like instructions on how to merge years, you can happily ignore them - rand has done it for you. the health and retirement study only includes noninstitutionalized adults when new respondents get added to the panel (as they were in 1992, 1993, 1998, 2004, and 2010) but once they're in, they're in - respondents have a weight of zero for interview waves when they were nursing home residents; but they're still responding and will continue to contribute to your statistics so long as you're generalizing about a population from a previous wave (for example: it's possible to compute "among all americans who were 50+ years old in 1998, x% lived in nursing homes by 2010"). my source for that 411? page 13 of the design doc. wicked. this new github repository contains five scripts: 1992 - 2010 download HRS microdata.R loop through every year and every file, download, then unzip everything in one big party impor t longitudinal RAND contributed files.R create a SQLite database (.db) on the local disk load the rand, rand-cams, and both rand-family files into the database (.db) in chunks (to prevent overloading ram) longitudinal RAND - analysis examples.R connect to the sql database created by the 'import longitudinal RAND contributed files' program create tw o database-backed complex sample survey object, using a taylor-series linearization design perform a mountain of analysis examples with wave weights from two different points in the panel import example HRS file.R load a fixed-width file using only the sas importation script directly into ram with < a href="http://blog.revolutionanalytics.com/2012/07/importing-public-data-with-sas-instructions-into-r.html">SAScii parse through the IF block at the bottom of the sas importation script, blank out a number of variables save the file as an R data file (.rda) for fast loading later replicate 2002 regression.R connect to the sql database created by the 'import longitudinal RAND contributed files' program create a database-backed complex sample survey object, using a taylor-series linearization design exactly match the final regression shown in this document provided by analysts at RAND as an update of the regression on pdf page B76 of this document . click here to view these five scripts for more detail about the health and retirement study (hrs), visit: michigan's hrs homepage rand's hrs homepage the hrs wikipedia page a running list of publications using hrs notes: exemplary work making it this far. as a reward, here's the detailed codebook for the main rand hrs file. note that rand also creates 'flat files' for every survey wave, but really, most every analysis you c an think of is possible using just the four files imported with the rand importation script above. if you must work with the non-rand files, there's an example of how to import a single hrs (umich-created) file, but if you wish to import more than one, you'll have to write some for loops yourself. confidential to sas, spss, stata, and sudaan users: a tidal wave is coming. you can get water up your nose and be dragged out to sea, or you can grab a surf board. time to transition to r. :D

  6. Z

    Data from: Do Agile Scaling Approaches Make A Difference? An Empirical...

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • zenodo.org
    Updated Oct 2, 2023
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    Christiaan Verwijs; Daniel Russo (2023). Do Agile Scaling Approaches Make A Difference? An Empirical Comparison of Team Effectiveness Across Popular Scaling Approaches [Dataset]. https://data.niaid.nih.gov/resources?id=zenodo_8396486
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 2, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Aalborg University
    The Liberators
    Authors
    Christiaan Verwijs; Daniel Russo
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This bundle contains supplementary materials for an upcoming academic publication Do Agile Scaling Approaches Make A Difference? An Empirical Comparison of Team Effectiveness Across Popular Scaling Approaches?, by Christiaan Verwijs and Daniel Russo. Included in the bundle are the dataset and SPSS syntaxes. This replication package is made available by C. Verwijs under a "Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share-Alike 4.0 International"-license (CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0).

    About the dataset

    The dataset (SPSS) contains anonymized response data from 15,078 team members aggregated into 4,013 Agile teams that participated from scrumteamsurvey.org. Stakeholder evaluations of 1,841 stakeholders were also collected for 529 of those teams. Data was gathered between September 2021, and September 2023. We cleaned the individual response data from careless responses and removed all data that could potentially identify teams, individuals, or their parent organizations. Because we wanted to analyze our measures at the team level, we calculated a team-level mean for each item in the survey. Such aggregation is only justified when at least 10% of the variance exists at the team level (Hair, 2019), which was the case (ICC = 35-50%). No data was missing at the team level.

    Question labels and option labels are provided separately in Questions.csv. To conform to the privacy statement of scrumteamsurvey.org, the bundle does not include response data from before the team-level aggregation.

    About the SPSS syntaxes

    The bundle includes the syntaxes we used to prepare the dataset from the raw import, as well as the syntax we used to generate descriptives. This is mostly there for other researchers to verify our procedure.

  7. m

    Data for: Can government transfers make energy subsidy reform socially...

    • data.mendeley.com
    Updated Mar 31, 2020
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    Filip Schaffitzel (2020). Data for: Can government transfers make energy subsidy reform socially acceptable? A case study on Ecuador [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.17632/z35m76mf9g.1
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    Dataset updated
    Mar 31, 2020
    Authors
    Filip Schaffitzel
    License

    Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 (CC BY-NC 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Ecuador
    Description

    Estimating the distributional impacts of energy subsidy removal and compensation schemes in Ecuador based on input-output and household data.

    Import files: Dictionary Categories.csv, Dictionary ENI-IOT.csv, and Dictionary Subcategories.csv based on [1] Dictionary IOT.csv and IOT_2012.csv (cannot be redistruted) based on [2] Dictionary Taxes.csv and Dictionary Transfers.csv based on [3] ENIGHUR11_GASTOS_V.csv, ENIGHUR11_HOGARES_AGREGADOS.csv, and ENIGHUR11_PERSONAS_INGRESOS.csv based on [4] Price increase scenarios.csv based on [5]

    Further basic files and documents: [1] 4_M&D_Mapping ENIGHUR expenditures to IOT_180605.xlsm [2] Input-output table 2012 (https://contenido.bce.fin.ec/documentos/PublicacionesNotas/Catalogo/CuentasNacionales/Anuales/Dolares/MIP2012Ampliada.xls). Save the sheet with the IOT 2012 (Matriz simétrica) as IOT_2012.csv and edit the format: first column and row: IOT labels [3] 4_M&D_ENIGHUR income_180606.xlsx [4] ENIGHUR data can be retrieved from http://www.ecuadorencifras.gob.ec/encuesta-nacional-de-ingresos-y-gastos-de-los-hogares-urbanos-y-rurales/ Household datasets are only available in SPSS file format and the free software PSPP is used to convert .sav- to .csv-files, as this format can be read directly and efficiently into a Python Pandas DataFrame. See PSPP syntax below: save translate /outfile = filename /type = CSV /textoptions decimal = DOT /textoptions delimiter = ';' /fieldnames /cells=values /replace. [5] 3_Ecuador_Energy subsidies and 4_M&D_Price scenarios_180610.xlsx

  8. e

    Harmonized Household Health Survey, HHHS 2012 - Iraq

    • erfdataportal.com
    Updated Dec 4, 2016
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    Kurdistan Regional Statistics Office (KRSO) (2016). Harmonized Household Health Survey, HHHS 2012 - Iraq [Dataset]. https://erfdataportal.com/index.php/catalog/110
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Dec 4, 2016
    Dataset provided by
    Economic Research Forum
    Kurdistan Regional Statistics Office (KRSO)
    Central Statistical Organization (CSO)
    Time period covered
    2012 - 2013
    Area covered
    Iraq
    Description

    Abstract

    The harmonized data set on health, created and published by the ERF, is a subset of Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2012. It was derived from the household, individual and health modules, collected in the context of the above mentioned survey. The sample was then used to create a harmonized health survey, comparable with the Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2007 micro data set.

    ----> Overview of the Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2012:

    Iraq is considered a leader in household expenditure and income surveys where the first was conducted in 1946 followed by surveys in 1954 and 1961. After the establishment of Central Statistical Organization, household expenditure and income surveys were carried out every 3-5 years in (1971/ 1972, 1976, 1979, 1984/ 1985, 1988, 1993, 2002 / 2007). Implementing the cooperation between CSO and WB, Central Statistical Organization (CSO) and Kurdistan Region Statistics Office (KRSO) launched fieldwork on IHSES on 1/1/2012. The survey was carried out over a full year covering all governorates including those in Kurdistan Region.

    The survey has six main objectives. These objectives are:

    1. Provide data for poverty analysis and measurement and monitor, evaluate and update the implementation Poverty Reduction National Strategy issued in 2009.
    2. Provide comprehensive data system to assess household social and economic conditions and prepare the indicators related to the human development.
    3. Provide data that meet the needs and requirements of national accounts.
    4. Provide detailed indicators on consumption expenditure that serve making decision related to production, consumption, export and import.
    5. Provide detailed indicators on the sources of households and individuals income.
    6. Provide data necessary for formulation of a new consumer price index number.

    The raw survey data provided by the Statistical Office were then harmonized by the Economic Research Forum, to create a comparable version with the 2006/2007 Household Socio Economic Survey in Iraq. Harmonization at this stage only included unifying variables' names, labels and some definitions. See: Iraq 2007 & 2012- Variables Mapping & Availability Matrix.pdf provided in the external resources for further information on the mapping of the original variables on the harmonized ones, in addition to more indications on the variables' availability in both survey years and relevant comments.

    Geographic coverage

    National coverage: Covering a sample of urban, rural and metropolitan areas in all the governorates including those in Kurdistan Region.

    Analysis unit

    1- Household/family. 2- Individual/person.

    Universe

    The survey was carried out over a full year covering all governorates including those in Kurdistan Region.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    ----> Design:

    Sample size was (25488) household for the whole Iraq, 216 households for each district of 118 districts, 2832 clusters each of which includes 9 households distributed on districts and governorates for rural and urban.

    ----> Sample frame:

    Listing and numbering results of 2009-2010 Population and Housing Survey were adopted in all the governorates including Kurdistan Region as a frame to select households, the sample was selected in two stages: Stage 1: Primary sampling unit (blocks) within each stratum (district) for urban and rural were systematically selected with probability proportional to size to reach 2832 units (cluster). Stage two: 9 households from each primary sampling unit were selected to create a cluster, thus the sample size of total survey clusters was 25488 households distributed on the governorates, 216 households in each district.

    ----> Sampling Stages:

    In each district, the sample was selected in two stages: Stage 1: based on 2010 listing and numbering frame 24 sample points were selected within each stratum through systematic sampling with probability proportional to size, in addition to the implicit breakdown urban and rural and geographic breakdown (sub-district, quarter, street, county, village and block). Stage 2: Using households as secondary sampling units, 9 households were selected from each sample point using systematic equal probability sampling. Sampling frames of each stages can be developed based on 2010 building listing and numbering without updating household lists. In some small districts, random selection processes of primary sampling may lead to select less than 24 units therefore a sampling unit is selected more than once , the selection may reach two cluster or more from the same enumeration unit when it is necessary.

    Mode of data collection

    Face-to-face [f2f]

    Research instrument

    ----> Preparation:

    The questionnaire of 2006 survey was adopted in designing the questionnaire of 2012 survey on which many revisions were made. Two rounds of pre-test were carried out. Revision were made based on the feedback of field work team, World Bank consultants and others, other revisions were made before final version was implemented in a pilot survey in September 2011. After the pilot survey implemented, other revisions were made in based on the challenges and feedbacks emerged during the implementation to implement the final version in the actual survey.

    ----> Questionnaire Parts:

    The questionnaire consists of four parts each with several sections: Part 1: Socio – Economic Data: - Section 1: Household Roster - Section 2: Emigration - Section 3: Food Rations - Section 4: housing - Section 5: education - Section 6: health - Section 7: Physical measurements - Section 8: job seeking and previous job

    Part 2: Monthly, Quarterly and Annual Expenditures: - Section 9: Expenditures on Non – Food Commodities and Services (past 30 days). - Section 10 : Expenditures on Non – Food Commodities and Services (past 90 days). - Section 11: Expenditures on Non – Food Commodities and Services (past 12 months). - Section 12: Expenditures on Non-food Frequent Food Stuff and Commodities (7 days). - Section 12, Table 1: Meals Had Within the Residential Unit. - Section 12, table 2: Number of Persons Participate in the Meals within Household Expenditure Other Than its Members.

    Part 3: Income and Other Data: - Section 13: Job - Section 14: paid jobs - Section 15: Agriculture, forestry and fishing - Section 16: Household non – agricultural projects - Section 17: Income from ownership and transfers - Section 18: Durable goods - Section 19: Loans, advances and subsidies - Section 20: Shocks and strategy of dealing in the households - Section 21: Time use - Section 22: Justice - Section 23: Satisfaction in life - Section 24: Food consumption during past 7 days

    Part 4: Diary of Daily Expenditures: Diary of expenditure is an essential component of this survey. It is left at the household to record all the daily purchases such as expenditures on food and frequent non-food items such as gasoline, newspapers…etc. during 7 days. Two pages were allocated for recording the expenditures of each day, thus the roster will be consists of 14 pages.

    Cleaning operations

    ----> Raw Data:

    Data Editing and Processing: To ensure accuracy and consistency, the data were edited at the following stages: 1. Interviewer: Checks all answers on the household questionnaire, confirming that they are clear and correct. 2. Local Supervisor: Checks to make sure that questions has been correctly completed. 3. Statistical analysis: After exporting data files from excel to SPSS, the Statistical Analysis Unit uses program commands to identify irregular or non-logical values in addition to auditing some variables. 4. World Bank consultants in coordination with the CSO data management team: the World Bank technical consultants use additional programs in SPSS and STAT to examine and correct remaining inconsistencies within the data files. The software detects errors by analyzing questionnaire items according to the expected parameter for each variable.

    ----> Harmonized Data:

    • The SPSS package is used to harmonize the Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2007 with Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) 2012.
    • The harmonization process starts with raw data files received from the Statistical Office.
    • A program is generated for each dataset to create harmonized variables.
    • Data is saved on the household and individual level, in SPSS and then converted to STATA, to be disseminated.

    Response rate

    Iraq Household Socio Economic Survey (IHSES) reached a total of 25488 households. Number of households refused to response was 305, response rate was 98.6%. The highest interview rates were in Ninevah and Muthanna (100%) while the lowest rates were in Sulaimaniya (92%).

  9. H

    Public Opinion Barometer, 1995-2004 pooled dataset

    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    • search.dataone.org
    Updated Jul 27, 2022
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    Bogdan Voicu; Ovidiu Voicu (2022). Public Opinion Barometer, 1995-2004 pooled dataset [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/N1LLNU
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Jul 27, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Bogdan Voicu; Ovidiu Voicu
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    All datasets from 1995 to 2004 of the Public Opinion Barometer, carried out in Romania by Soros Foundation. Each dataset is described in its section of this dataverse. In 2005, a pooled dataset was compiled by Bogdan Voicu. Project officer: Ovidiu Voicu. The dataset is provided in SPSS (zsav) and Stata (dta) formats. For R, we recommand using the package readstata13, in order to properly import data. Labels are provided for the moment only in Romanian. No weigthing variable is necessary: every single sample is not significantly different from population in terms of age, gender, education, ethnicity, and regional distribution (including their joint distributions).

  10. H

    Public Opinion Barometer, 2006.05

    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    Updated Aug 2, 2022
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    Ovidiu Voicu; Mihaela Ștefănescu; Bogdan Voicu (2022). Public Opinion Barometer, 2006.05 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/EM61GX
    Explore at:
    CroissantCroissant is a format for machine-learning datasets. Learn more about this at mlcommons.org/croissant.
    Dataset updated
    Aug 2, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Ovidiu Voicu; Mihaela Ștefănescu; Bogdan Voicu
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Fieldwork: May 2006. Data collecting agency: Gallup. Program officers: Ovidiu Voicu, Mihaela Ștefănescu. Database and press release retrieved by Ovidiu Voicu & Bogdan Voicu. ************************************* Datasets are provided in SPSS and Stata (13+) formats. For R, we recommend using package readstata13 in order to import the database. Labels are provided for the moment only in Romanian language. No weighting system is provided, for the mere reason that sample structure reflects correctly population structure, and there is no need for weighting (all weights should be equal to 1).

  11. d

    Public Opinion Barometer, 2006.10

    • search.dataone.org
    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    Updated Nov 8, 2023
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    Mircea Comșa; Dumitru Sandu; Andrei Gheorghiță; Ovidiu Voicu; Mihaela Ștefănescu; Voicu, Bogdan (2023). Public Opinion Barometer, 2006.10 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/MUDF3Z
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 8, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Mircea Comșa; Dumitru Sandu; Andrei Gheorghiță; Ovidiu Voicu; Mihaela Ștefănescu; Voicu, Bogdan
    Description

    Fieldwork: October 2010. Data collecting agency: Gallup. Team: Mircea Comşa, Dumitru Sandu, Andrei Gheorghiţă, Ovidiu Voicu, Mihaela Ștefănescu. Database and press releases (RO & EN) retrieved by Ovidiu Voicu, Bogdan Voicu, & Mircea Comșa. ************************************* Datasets are provided in SPSS and Stata (13+) formats. For R, we recommend using package readstata13 in order to import the database. Labels are provided for the moment only in Romanian language. No weighting system is provided, for the mere reason that sample structure reflects correctly population structure, and there is no need for weighting (all weights should be equal to 1).

  12. Not seeing a result you expected?
    Learn how you can add new datasets to our index.

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Heather Cribbs; Gabriel Gardner (2023). Data for "To Pre-Filter, or Not to Pre-Filter, That Is the Query: A Multi-Campus Big Data Study" [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.19071578.v1
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Data for "To Pre-Filter, or Not to Pre-Filter, That Is the Query: A Multi-Campus Big Data Study"

Explore at:
pdfAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Jun 1, 2023
Dataset provided by
Figsharehttp://figshare.com/
Authors
Heather Cribbs; Gabriel Gardner
License

Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically

Description

Five files, one of which is a ZIP archive, containing data that support the findings of this study. PDF file "IA screenshots CSU Libraries search config" contains screenshots captured from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine for all 24 CalState libraries' homepages for years 2017 - 2019. Excel file "CCIHE2018-PublicDataFile" contains Carnegie Classifications data from the Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research for all of the CalState campuses from 2018. CSV file "2017-2019_RAW" contains the raw data exported from Ex Libris Primo Analytics (OBIEE) for all 24 CalState libraries for calendar years 2017 - 2019. CSV file "clean_data" contains the cleaned data from Primo Analytics which was used for all subsequent analysis such as charting and import into SPSS for statistical testing. ZIP archive file "NonparametricStatisticalTestsFromSPSS" contains 23 SPSS files [.spv format] reporting the results of testing conducted in SPSS. This archive includes things such as normality check, descriptives, and Kruskal-Wallis H-test results.

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