Poisson samplingIn survey methodology, Poisson sampling (sometimes denoted as PO sampling[1]: 61 ) is a sampling process where each element of the population is subjected to an independent Bernoulli trial which determines whether the element becomes part of the sample.[1]: 85 [2] Each element of the population may have a different probability of being included in the sample (). The probability of being included in a sample during the drawing of a single sample is denoted as the first-order inclusion probability of that element (). If all first-order inclusion probabilities are equal, Poisson sampling becomes equivalent to Bernoulli sampling, which can therefore be considered to be a special case of Poisson sampling. A mathematical consequence of Poisson samplingMathematically, the first-order inclusion probability of the ith element of the population is denoted by the symbol and the second-order inclusion probability that a pair consisting of the ith and jth element of the population that is sampled is included in a sample during the drawing of a single sample is denoted by . The following relation is valid during Poisson sampling when : is defined to be . See alsoReferences
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