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Cohort Analysis in Social Research : Beyond the Identification Problem / edited by W.M. Mason, S. Fienberg

1st ed. 1985.
出版者 (New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer)
出版年 1985
大きさ VIII, 400 p : online resource
著者標目 Mason, W.M editor
Fienberg, S editor
SpringerLink (Online service)
件 名 LCSH:Statistics 
FREE:Statistics in Business, Management, Economics, Finance, Insurance
一般注記 1. Introduction: Beyond the Identification Problem -- 2. The Cohort as a Concept in the Study of Social Change -- 3. Specification and Implementation of Age, Period and Cohort Models -- 4. Age, Period, and Cohort Effects in Demography: A Review -- 5. Using Longitudinal Data to Estimate Age, Period and Cohort Effects in Earnings Equations -- 6. Age-Period-Cohort Analysis and the Study of Deaths from Pulmonary Tuberculosis -- 7. Analysis of Age, Period, and Cohort Effects in Marital Fertility -- 8. Dynamic Modeling of Cohort Change: The Case of Political Partisanship -- 9. Generations, Cohorts, and Conformity -- 10. Simultaneous Analysis of Longitudinal Data from Several Cohorts -- 11. Statistics and the Scientific Method -- 12. Reply to Freedman -- 13. Comments on and Reactions to Freedman, Statistics and the Scientific Method -- 14. A Rejoinder to Fienberg’s Comments -- Author Index
The existence of the present volume can be traced to methodological concerns about cohort analysis, all of which were evident throughout most of the social sciences by the late 1970s. For some social scientists, they became part of a broader discussion concerning the need for new analytical techniques for research based on longitudinal data. In 1976, the Social Science Research Council (SSRC), with funds from the National Institute of Education, established a Committee on the Methodology of Longitudinal Research. (The scholars who comprised this committee are listed at the front of this volume. ) As part of the efforts of this Committee, an interdisciplinary conference on cohort analysis was held in the summer of 1979, in Snowmass, Colorado. Much of the work presented here stems from that conference, the purpose of which was to promote the development of general methodological tools for the study of social change. The conference included five major presentations by (1) William Mason and Herbert Smith, (2) Karl J6reskog and Dag S6rbom, (3) Gregory Markus, (4) John Hobcraft, Jane Menken and Samuel Preston, and (5) Stephen Fienberg and William Mason. The formal presentations were each followed by extensive discussion, which involved as participants: Paul Baltes, William Butz, Philip Converse, Otis Dudley Duncan, David Freedman, William Meredith, John Nesselroade, Daniel Price, Thomas Pullum, Peter Read, Matilda White Riley, Norman Ryder, Warren Sanderson, Warner Schaie, Burton Singer, Nancy Tuma, Harrison White, and Halliman Winsborough
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書誌ID 4000106196
ISBN 9781461385363

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