Talk:Sampling (statistics)
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{{Copied|from=Random sample|to=Sampling (statistics)|diff=http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sampling_%28statistics%29&diff=545882116&oldid=545881449}}
{{merged from|Sample (statistics)|date=10 May 2022|discuss=Talk:Sample_(statistics)#Merger_proposal}}
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|author = Surhone, L. M.
|year = 2010
|title = The wisdom of crowds: James Surowiecki, anecdote, Francis Galton, crowd psychology, sampling (statistics), Charles Mackay
|org =
|comments = {{OCLC|700931293}}, {{ISBN|9786130456672}}.
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The very serious loss of a simple definition of the word 'sample'
The word 'sample' has a specific meaning in statistics; the term is frequently misused by laypeople when discussing statistics and it had long been useful to be able to refer people to what the word is used to mean within the subject of statistics. The old article "Sample_(statistics)" (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sample_(statistics)&oldid=1060080564) which was merged into this article had a reasonable definition in its opening sentence, "In statistics and quantitative research methodology, a sample is a set of individuals or objects collected or selected from a statistical population by a defined procedure", which clearly distinguishes it from 'observation'.
The 'merged' article does not seem to contain such a definition of just the word 'sample' like that, when it should come before it starts using the term. There are one or two definitions of more specific terms, but before such "
Glenbarnett (talk) 23:44, 15 July 2022 (UTC)