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Multiple Systems Estimation for Sparse Capture Data: Inferential Challenges When There Are Nonoverlapping Lists

Lax Chan, Bernard W. Silverman, Kyle Vincent

2020Journal of the American Statistical Association34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Multiple systems estimation strategies have recently been applied to quantify hard-to-reach populations, particularly when estimating the number of victims of human trafficking and modern slavery. In such contexts, it is not uncommon to see sparse or even no overlap between some of the lists on which the estimates are based. These create difficulties in model fitting and selection, and we develop inference procedures to address these challenges. The approach is based on Poisson log-linear regression modeling. Issues investigated in detail include taking proper account of data sparsity in the estimation procedure, as well as the existence and identifiability of maximum likelihood estimates. A stepwise method for choosing the most suitable parameters is developed, together with a bootstrap approach to finding confidence intervals for the total population size. We apply the strategy to two empirical datasets of trafficking in US regions, and find that the approach results in stable, reasonable estimates. An accompanying R software implementation has been made publicly available. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

Topics & Concepts

IdentifiabilityInferenceComputer sciencePoisson regressionEstimationPoisson distributionData miningSoftwarePopulationMachine learningRegressionEstimation theoryStatistical inferencePoint estimationFiducial inferenceAlgorithmConfidence regionArtificial intelligenceR packageRegression analysisExpectation–maximization algorithmMathematicsConfidence distributionMathematical optimizationStatistical modelData collectionEmpirical researchCensus and Population EstimationHIV, Drug Use, Sexual RiskForensic Anthropology and Bioarchaeology Studies
Multiple Systems Estimation for Sparse Capture Data: Inferential Challenges When There Are Nonoverlapping Lists | Litcius