scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Jianghong Li | Q88412435 |
Thomas W Valente | Q89290836 | ||
P2093 | author name string | Robert Heimer | |
Alexei Zelenev | |||
Eduardo Robles | |||
Greg Palmer | |||
Chinekwu Obidoa | |||
Hee-Sung Shin | |||
Margaret Weeks | |||
Gayatri Moothi | |||
Heather Mosher | |||
P2860 | cites work | Using social networks to recruit an HIV vaccine preparedness cohort | Q30227795 |
Assessment of Random Recruitment Assumption in Respondent-Driven Sampling in Egocentric Network Data | Q30620984 | ||
Application of respondent driven sampling to collect baseline data on FSWs and MSM for HIV risk reduction interventions in two urban centres in Papua New Guinea | Q31070418 | ||
Accuracy of name and age data provided about network members in a social network study of people who use drugs: implications for constructing sociometric networks | Q31157129 | ||
Evaluating recruitment among female sex workers and injecting drug users at risk for HIV using respondent-driven sampling in Estonia | Q33754339 | ||
Assessing respondent-driven sampling | Q33859361 | ||
Outcomes of a peer HIV prevention program with injection drug and crack users: the Risk Avoidance Partnership | Q33958259 | ||
Comparing respondent-driven sampling and targeted sampling methods of recruiting injection drug users in San Francisco | Q34117952 | ||
Multiplex congruity: friendship networks and perceived popularity as correlates of adolescent alcohol use. | Q34566640 | ||
Assessment of respondent driven sampling for recruiting female sex workers in two Vietnamese cities: reaching the unseen sex worker. | Q35230016 | ||
Respondent-driven sampling of injection drug users in two U.S.-Mexico border cities: recruitment dynamics and impact on estimates of HIV and syphilis prevalence | Q35230093 | ||
Variance estimation, design effects, and sample size calculations for respondent-driven sampling | Q35230123 | ||
Implementation and analysis of respondent driven sampling: lessons learned from the field | Q35230142 | ||
Spatial, temporal and relational patterns in respondent-driven sampling: evidence from a social network study of rural drug users | Q35541751 | ||
Assessing the geographic coverage and spatial clustering of illicit drug users recruited through respondent-driven sampling in New York City | Q35543311 | ||
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SNOWBALL VERSUS RESPONDENT-DRIVEN SAMPLING | Q35650557 | ||
Evaluation of respondent-driven sampling. | Q35752128 | ||
Network Model-Assisted Inference from Respondent-Driven Sampling Data | Q35861848 | ||
Network Structure and Biased Variance Estimation in Respondent Driven Sampling | Q35872274 | ||
A qualitative analysis of peer recruitment pressures in respondent driven sampling: Are risks above the ethical limit? | Q35977926 | ||
Partner Naming and Forgetting: Recall of Network Members | Q36076255 | ||
Review of sampling hard-to-reach and hidden populations for HIV surveillance | Q36147918 | ||
Respondent-Driven Sampling: An Assessment of Current Methodology | Q36219811 | ||
The relevance of drug injectors' social and risk networks for understanding and preventing HIV infection | Q36746154 | ||
Effectiveness of respondent-driven sampling for recruiting drug users in New York City: findings from a pilot study | Q36856070 | ||
Diagnostics for Respondent-driven Sampling | Q36927238 | ||
Ethical and regulatory considerations in HIV prevention studies employing respondent-driven sampling | Q37075171 | ||
A social network approach to demonstrate the diffusion and change process of intervention from peer health advocates to the drug using community. | Q37088956 | ||
Using respondent-driven sampling methodology for HIV biological and behavioral surveillance in international settings: a systematic review | Q37193820 | ||
Network Sampling with Memory: A proposal for more efficient sampling from social networks | Q37247152 | ||
Simultaneous recruitment of drug users and men who have sex with men in the United States and Russia using respondent-driven sampling: sampling methods and implications | Q37249708 | ||
Implementation challenges to using respondent-driven sampling methodology for HIV biological and behavioral surveillance: field experiences in international settings | Q39109661 | ||
Network-related mechanisms may help explain long-term HIV-1 seroprevalence levels that remain high but do not approach population-group saturation | Q39552765 | ||
HIV-associated behaviors among injecting-drug users--23 Cities, United States, May 2005-February 2006. | Q39880574 | ||
Identification of homophily and preferential recruitment in respondent-driven sampling | Q40163359 | ||
Network models for HIV outreach and prevention programs for drug users | Q41065426 | ||
The Strength of Weak Ties | Q41779230 | ||
Determinants of injection drug user (IDU) syringe sharing: the relationship between availability of syringes and risk network member characteristics in Winnipeg, Canada | Q42631493 | ||
Social factors related to syringe sharing among injecting partners: a focus on gender | Q42667888 | ||
Nonparametric Identification for Respondent-Driven Sampling. | Q42928325 | ||
Formative research to optimize respondent-driven sampling surveys among hard-to-reach populations in HIV behavioral and biological surveillance: lessons learned from four case studies. | Q51565708 | ||
The relationships between sexual behavior, alcohol use, and personal network characteristics among injecting drug users in Baltimore, Maryland. | Q51634821 | ||
Forgetting as a cause of incomplete reporting of sexual and drug injection partners. | Q51986066 | ||
A personal network approach to AIDS prevention: an experimental peer group intervention for street-injecting drug users: the SAFE study. | Q52019611 | ||
The effect of peer-driven intervention on rates of screening for AIDS clinical trials among African Americans and Hispanics. | Q55446924 | ||
5. Sampling and Estimation in Hidden Populations Using Respondent-Driven Sampling | Q56505049 | ||
Respondent-Driven Sampling II: Deriving Valid Population Estimates from Chain-Referral Samples of Hidden Populations | Q56505051 | ||
Respondent-Driven Sampling: A New Approach to the Study of Hidden Populations | Q56505053 | ||
Ethical considerations in HIV/AIDS biobehavioral surveys that use respondent-driven sampling: illustrations from Lebanon | Q56781466 | ||
Personal social networks and HIV status among women on methadone | Q58136276 | ||
Social Networks of Drug Users in High-Risk Sites: Finding the Connections | Q58488905 | ||
Selective risk taking among needle exchange participants: implications for supplemental interventions | Q73582046 | ||
Mechanisms through which drug, sex partner, and friendship network characteristics relate to risky needle use among high risk youth and young adults | Q80019942 | ||
Critical issues and further questions about respondent-driven sampling: comment on Ramirez-Valles, et al. (2005) | Q81607526 | ||
P433 | issue | 7 | |
P921 | main subject | oversight | Q60697989 |
P304 | page(s) | 2340-2359 | |
P577 | publication date | 2018-07-01 | |
P1433 | published in | AIDS and Behavior | Q15752229 |
P1476 | title | Overlooked Threats to Respondent Driven Sampling Estimators: Peer Recruitment Reality, Degree Measures, and Random Selection Assumption | |
P478 | volume | 22 |
Q91892891 | Estimation and correction of bias in network simulations based on respondent-driven sampling data |
Q38679499 | HIV Risk, Prevalence, and Access to Care Among Men Who Have Sex with Men in Lebanon. |
Q45324640 | Hepatitis C virus treatment as prevention in an extended network of people who inject drugs in the USA: a modelling study |
Q57809085 | Intervention Reach and Sexual Risk Reduction of a Multi-level, Community-Based HIV Prevention Intervention for Crack Users in San Salvador, El Salvador |
Q52656443 | Multiple strategies to identify HIV-positive black men who have sex with men and transgender women in New York City: a cross-sectional analysis of recruitment results. |
Q99709701 | Risky injection practices and HCV awareness in Chiang Mai Province, Thailand: a respondent-driven sampling study of people who inject drugs |
Q89130648 | Statistical adjustment of network degree in respondent-driven sampling estimators: venue attendance as a proxy for network size among young MSM |
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