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I need help, please, in determining a sample size for a random selection of polygons. I need to select a set of mosques for a mortality survey, but I don't have a ready made list from which to select them. I've subdivided my study area into 10,000 4 square kilometer polygons. My team will thoroughly identify all of the mosques within those sample areas through a foot survey. That should give us a list of representative mosques from which to randomly select the mosque sample. I'm stuck, however, in figuring out how many of those 10,000 polygons to walk. I think that I should be applying Cochran's formula to this problem. It looks like this: Where: Z is the z score that sets the "confidence level". The gold standard for the social sciences is 1.96 for a 95% level. You set that if you want your sample to get you the accuracy you expect 19 out of 20 times. p is the "population proportion", the estimated proportion of the attribute present in the population. In a marketing survey it would be something like "what proportion of consumers who prefer brand x." Question 1: What should that attribute be in this context? I can't identify any. Unless someone can enlighten me, I'm going to punt with a 50% proportion, "maximum variability", the worst you can have if you want to keep your sample size down. M is the ‘confidence interval’ or 'margin of error', within which you want your estimate to fall. You express it as an absolute, in decimal format. "I want to know what percentage of consumers prefer brand x, give or take five percentage points (absolute, not relative). Question 2: What should I use for my M value? What margins? Around what? I'm not measuring any attribute to do with the sample blocks, just listing their mosques. My only wish for them is that, as a group, they contain a large, representative bunch of mosques. Am I just trying to fit a round peg in a square hole? Should I be taking a different approach to the question of how many blocks to select to be surveyed? The only alternative I can think of is to approach the problem using trial and error: I'd mock up a list of mosques with a set of assumed mortality rates, sprinkle the imaginary mosques around my 10,000 polygons, select a sample of n of those polygons, select a random sample of the mosques within the n sample areas, and calculate the mortality rate of the sampled mosques. I'd do that repeatedly for a given sample size, and see if my estimated mortality rate consistently came out close to my original assumed overall mortality rate. Thanks for any guidance you can offer.
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04-06-2022
06:38 PM
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The Sign In window really has two jobs, letting people in, and keeping them out. It’s effective but unhelpful at keeping them out, like a bouncer who only knows how to say “Show me some ID”. “Are you open tonight? Is this the Copa? Can I use your bathroom?” “Uh... gotta show ID”. The bouncer is particularly unaccommodating when you are trying to open a Story Map but have neglected to share one of its components. He gives you no hint of what’s wrong, and is less than cooperative as you try to fix the problem. If you go back to your Story Map, fix the share problem, and return to your browser to test it, you have to re-copy and re-paste the map’s URL. If you merely refresh the browser, which no longer has the original URL, you’ll get the same Sign In screen, whether you have succeeded in fixing your Story shares or not. (I won’t admit how long I went around in circles before I acquired that insight). It would be more helpful if the Sign In screen had an option to resubmit a URL.
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03-17-2019
11:16 AM
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I had been scratching grooves in my head trying to figure out why I couldn't get the Feature Class to Geodatabase geoprocessing tool to copy a boundary set from one geodatabase to another geodatabase in ArcGIS Pro 2.1.2. The tool reports success, and Windows Explorer updates its timestamps for the .gdb file, but the newly copied layer is nowhere to be found - the target database .gdf would come up as "This container is empty" when I tried to Add Data from it to the map. But it turns out that the target geodatabase was receiving the new layer all along. As soon as I exited ArcGIS Pro, relaunched it and reopened my project, the new layer appeared and I was able to open it into my map. I have to believe that I'm doing something wrong, or screwed up something in installing Pro to have to resort to that goofy workaround. Can anyone think what? Thanks. ETA: Tyler, the original poster, later posted a follow up on his original post: "You need to manually refresh by right clicking on the folder/geodatabase and hit refresh. And yes, you need to do this every time something changes in your .gdb (or any file/folder) outside of Pro or you wont see it. This is a known issue in Pro as it does not automatically update the catalog/folder tree as it does in most other Windows applications... . you hit "F5" to refresh the view... ." Here's the rest of that post of his: https://community.esri.com/message/750433-re-feature-classes-do-not-show-in-pro-catalog-tree?commentID=750433#comment-75…
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04-17-2018
10:10 AM
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