Project

General

Profile

Support #127

variables used to construct survey weights

Added by Laura Kudrna about 11 years ago. Updated about 11 years ago.

Status:
Closed
Priority:
Immediate
Assignee:
Redmine Admin
Category:
Data analysis
Start date:
02/28/2013
% Done:

100%


Description

Hello,

Where can I find out which variables were used to construct the survey weights available for Wave 2 of US?

This will be essential information for persuading my colleagues to use them on an imminent analysis.

Many thanks.

Kind regards,
Laura

#1

Updated by Redmine Admin about 11 years ago

  • Category set to Data analysis
  • Status changed from New to In Progress
  • Assignee set to Redmine Admin
  • Target version set to M2
  • % Done changed from 0 to 50

Laura,
I wonder whether this is a question about whether or not to use survey weights? The User Guide p.26 has a section on that question. The chapter on weighting refers to a working paper on the overall weighting strategy that might also be of interest. If this does not solve you problem, I think it would be useful if you would provide more detail on the specific issue at hand.
Jakob

#2

Updated by Laura Kudrna about 11 years ago

Hi Jakob,

Thank you for your reply. I am not seeking advice about whether or not to use survey weights. I have read the working paper and the User Guide.

I want to know if the variables I am using in my models are the same variables that were used to construct the weights. If they are, this may affect the estimates.

Where can I find out how the weights were constructed? Many thanks.

Best regards,
Laura

#3

Updated by Olena Kaminska about 11 years ago

Laura,

The answer to your question is - it depends. Each weight uses different set of variables, but the wave 2 weights will combine correction based on roughly between 50 to 100 variables of different kinds. I hope the details below will give you a better understanding of what this may mean for your estimation.

The weights in wave 2 consist of a number of corrections, all of which are important. The first part is design weight, which reflects the design and is not calculated based on any of the variables in the dataset. The second part corrects for household nonresponse at wave 1. This is a large part of the weight value, and the variables used for modelling this part are not released in the dataset - most of these variables are neighbourhood characteristics from Census and other administrative datasets. The next part, the correction for the individual within household nonresponse, is modelled using information from household grid and household questionnaire at wave 1. My understanding is that you are mainly worried about information from an individual questionnaire used for weighting. If you are an advanced user, you may want to model nonresponse yourself (possibly as part of your model). In this situation I would suggest to use wave 1 cross-sectional relevant weight, and correct for attrition between wave 1 and wave 2 as part of your model.

Just a warning note: some users think that one may control for nonresponse (or attrition) by putting control variables related to nonresponse into the model. This isn't true. Such approach corrects only for nonresponse in the intercept (mean or proportion estimate), and does not correct for the difference between respondents and nonrespondents in other estimates (for example regression coefficients), neither it reflects the correct standard errors of such estimates.

In my opinion you should not worry if the weights use the same variables as are present in your model. If the relationships between variables are influenced by weighting, they are changed in the direction closer to the relationship in the population - i.e. to reflect that nonrespondents tend to be with a different relationship between these variables.

I hope this is helpful,
Olena

#4

Updated by Redmine Admin about 11 years ago

  • Status changed from In Progress to Closed
  • % Done changed from 50 to 100

Also available in: Atom PDF