Two-sided confidence intervals for the single proportion: comparison of seven methods is a research paper published in Statistics in Medicine (1998). On theSindex it has a DataRank of 1.3. It has been cited 5,050 times.
Simple interval estimate methods for proportions exhibit poor coverage and can produce evidently inappropriate intervals. Criteria appropriate to the evaluation of various proposed methods include: closeness of the achieved coverage probability to its nominal value; whether intervals are located too close to or too distant from the middle of the scale; expected interval width; avoidance of aberrations such as limits outside [0,1] or zero width intervals; and ease of use, whether by tables, software or formulae. Seven methods for the single proportion are evaluated on 96,000 parameter space points. Intervals based on tail areas and the simpler score methods are recommended for use. In each case, methods are available that aim to align either the minimum or the mean coverage with the nominal 1 -alpha.
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Base Score Contribution
1.3
From this paper's citation signal
Citation Network Contribution
0
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