[HTML][HTML] 'Truncate, replicate, sample': A method for creating integer weights for spatial microsimulation

R Lovelace, D Ballas - Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, 2013 - Elsevier
Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, 2013Elsevier
Iterative proportional fitting (IPF) is a widely used method for spatial microsimulation. The
technique results in non-integer weights for individual rows of data. This is problematic for
certain applications and has led many researchers to favour combinatorial optimisation
approaches such as simulated annealing. An alternative to this is 'integerisation'of IPF
weights: the translation of the continuous weight variable into a discrete number of unique or
'cloned'individuals. We describe four existing methods of integerisation and present a new …
Abstract
Iterative proportional fitting (IPF) is a widely used method for spatial microsimulation. The technique results in non-integer weights for individual rows of data. This is problematic for certain applications and has led many researchers to favour combinatorial optimisation approaches such as simulated annealing. An alternative to this is ‘integerisation’ of IPF weights: the translation of the continuous weight variable into a discrete number of unique or ‘cloned’ individuals. We describe four existing methods of integerisation and present a new one. Our method – ‘truncate, replicate, sample’ (TRS) – recognises that IPF weights consist of both ‘replication weights’ and ‘conventional weights’, the effects of which need to be separated. The procedure consists of three steps: (1) separate replication and conventional weights by truncation; (2) replication of individuals with positive integer weights; and (3) probabilistic sampling. The results, which are reproducible using supplementary code and data published alongside this paper, show that TRS is fast, and more accurate than alternative approaches to integerisation.
Elsevier
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