Conventional sampling in biostatistics and economics posits an individual in a fixed observable state (e.g., diseased or not, poor or not, etc.). Social, market, and opinion research, however, require a cognitive sampling theory which recognizes that a respondent has a choice between two options (e.g., yes versus no). This new theory posits the survey respondent as a personal probability. Once the sample is drawn, a series of independent non-identical Bernoulli trials are carried out. The outcome of each trial is a momentary binary choice governed by this unobserved probability. Liapunov's extended central limit theorem (Lehmann, 1999) and the Horvitz-Thompson (1952) theorem are then brought to bear on sampling unobservables, in contrast to sampling observations. This formulation reaffirms the usefulness of a weighted sample proportion, which is now seen to estimate a different target parameter than that of conventional design-based sampling theory.
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