Attachment J - ATUS Weighting Plan

J - ATUS weighting plan.doc

American Time Use Survey (ATUS)

Attachment J - ATUS Weighting Plan

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May 30, 2007


MEMORANDUM FOR Cheryl Landman

Chief, Demographic Surveys Division


FROM: Ruth Ann Killion(Signed)

Chief, Demographic Statistical Methods Division


Subject: Weighting Specifications for The American Time Use Survey (ATUS) for 2006 (Doc.#ATUS-16)


Note: These specifications have been revised to reflect changes made to the raking procedure for the 2006 ATUS weighting. The 2006 weighting changes the raking procedure after the non-response adjustment by raking to (1) gender by race-ethnicity by day-of-week (weekday, weekend) cells, then to (2) gender by household type by educational attainment by day-of-week cells, then to (3) age (in 5-year groups) by gender by day-of-week cells. The new raking procedure is explained in Sections IV.F.5 and IV.F.6 of this specification. See Doc.#ATUS-13 for the raking procedure for the 2005 ATUS weighting [3].


These specifications also drop the SCHIP adjustment factors because SCHIP cases were made eligible for ATUS starting with the sample selected from the November 2004 CPS (the January 2005 ATUS panel).


These instructions concern public-use replicate weighting for the ATUS. Now that we have passed the phase-in period for CPS in ATUS, we have proposed that DSD-CPS run the public-use replicate weighting and CPSB in DSMD continue the verification. CPSB in DSMD will temporarily run the public-use replicate weighting until DSD-CPS can take over the processing. We assume that will take place before the 2007 ATUS weighting. Details of this process are provided in Section IV.A.


  1. OVERVIEW


The American Time Use Survey (ATUS) weighting process will produce person-level weights that can be used to produce quarterly and annual average estimates. The weighting will include adjustments to account for selecting the ATUS sample households from the monthly interviewed Current Population Survey (CPS) sample (sample from the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) Survey was eligible for ATUS beginning in January 2005). ATUS will also include adjustments to account for noninterviews and for the unique aspects of the survey design, such as selection of one person per household and the use of designated days. The weighting procedure, as described below, assumes processing based on activities reported for a day in a particular calendar month.



  1. INPUT FILES


    1. Input Files 1 to 3: Edited ATUS Data Files


These monthly person-level files contain the edited responses to the ATUS questionnaire, activity codes, and sampling information such as the state subsampling factor, the within-stratum sampling interval, and the within-household sampling factor. Also needed for weighting are: the CPS weight after the first-stage adjustment, sample month, and longitudinal identifier.


Name these files in the following format and put copies in the following directory on the ESPB machine in DSD:


/espb/timeuse/temp/weight/<yyyymm>/atus<yyyymm>.sas7bdat


    1. Input Files 4 to 9: CPS Internal Microdata Files for running CPS monthly

weighting through the first-stage


These files contain sample and interview information for every case in the full CPS, including the SCHIP expansion cases. These files are used to run the CPS public-use monthly weighting through the first-stage to obtain Output Files 2 through 7. Data items needed include:


  • Person and household records for interviewed households

(HRINTSTA=1); housing unit records for Type A (HRINTSTA=2) and Type B (HRINTSTA=3) noninterviews; and housing unit records for first-month Type C noninterviews (HRINTSTA=4).

  • The CPS/SCHIP sample flag (GECPSCHP), stratification PSU (GESTRPSU), county (GECO), frame (GEFRAME), and final hit number (GEHITNO) to match to the public-use replicate factor file

(Input File 10). Note that the CPS/SCHIP sample flag (GECPSCHP) has a value of “1” if the unit is in sample for CPS and a value of “2” if the unit is in sample for SCHIP.

  • The weight after applying the weighting control factor to the full-sample weight to obtain the CPS weight (HWWCWGT). Section IV.A provides further details of this process.


These files are located in the following directory on the CPSCOMP machine in DSD:


/data<b>/<mmmyy>cps.sas7bdat


where b is the month (1-12). The jan06cps.sas7bdat file is in /data1, the feb06cps.sas7bdat file is in /data2, etc. The ATUS sample processed through replicate weighting for a given ATUS quarter will consist of CPS records from 6 previous months, beginning 7 months before the last ATUS processing month of the quarter. For example, if the January-March 2006 ATUS quarter needs to be weighted, use August 2005 through January 2006. This is due to the fact that cases interviewed for a given ATUS quarter come from as many as 6 different months of sample.


    1. Input File 10: Public-Use Replicate Factor File for computing total variance (160 replicates)


This file contains the replicate factors for creating public-use replicate weights for the replicate samples used for variance estimation. It is used from July 2005 onward for computing total variance.

This file is located in the following directory on the DSMDE1 machine in

DSMD:


/cpsb/prod/rep/repfac2000_total_pu.sas7bdat


    1. Input File 11: CPS Internal Microdata File for generating controls


CPS composite and second-stage weights from this file will be used to generate controls (this file is for the CPS month corresponding to the ATUS panel code for the middle month in the quarter being processed), which will be used in the raking stage of the ATUS weighting. Data items needed include:


  1. Race/Ethnicity (Non-Hispanic/black alone, Non-Hispanic/non-black

alone, and Hispanic, any race) (PRBLNONB, PEHSPNON)

  1. Gender (PESEX)

  2. Age (category varies by race/ethnicity classification) (PEAGE)

  3. Educational attainment (completed high school or GED, did not

complete high school or GED) (PREACAT)

  1. Household Type (household with children or household without

children) (HRLONGID, PULINENO, PRPERTYP – internal version)

Note that this ‘household type’ does not strictly correspond with ATUS

Household Type, since the four original categories have been collapsed

into two.1


This file is located in the following directory on the CPSCOMP machine in DSD:


/data<b>/<mmmyy>cps.sas7bdat


where b is the month (1-12). For quarterly weighting, use the file for the middle month of the quarter. For example, for January-March 2006, use the February 2006 file.


    1. Input File 12: CPS Replicate Weights after the Second-Stage Adjustment for 15 year olds


This file contains the full-sample weight after the CPS second-stage adjustment, plus replicate weights after the second-stage adjustment for replicates 1 through 160 for CPS sample persons 15 years of age. For quarterly weighting, use the file for the middle month of the quarter with Input File 11. For example, for January-March 2006, use the February 2006 file.


This file is located in the following directory on the ESPB machine in DSD:


/espb/incoming/cps/ssrp_atus15_<mmyy>.sas7bdat


F. Input File 13: CPS Replicate Weights after the Composite Weighting Adjustment


This file contains the full-sample weight after the CPS composite weighting adjustment, plus replicate weights after the composite weighting adjustment for replicates 1 through 160 for CPS sample persons 16 years of age and older. For quarterly weighting, use the file for the middle month of the quarter with Input File 11. For example, for January-March 2006, use the February 2006 file.

This file is located in the following directory on the CPSCOMP machine in DSD:


/cpsrepwgt/cmrp<mmyy>.sas7bdat

  1. OUTPUT FILES


    1. Output File 1: Edited ATUS Data File Including Household (HH) Members


This file is a concatenated file of Input Files 1 through 3, with all HH members included. Place a copy of it in the following directory on the ESPB machine in DSD, with the indicated file name format:


/espb/timeuse/processing/weight/allmem<yyyy>q<b>.sas7bdat


where yyyy is the year and b is the quarter (1, 2, 3 or 4).


    1. Output Files 2 to 7: CPS Public-Use First-Stage-Replicate Weight Files


These files contain the CPS public-use first-stage replicate weights for all ATUS sample persons in Input Files 1 through 3. They contain the full-sample weight after the CPS first-stage adjustment (FSWGT0), plus replicate weights after the first-stage adjustment for replicates 1 through 160 (FSWGT1-FSWGT160) for CPS sample cases. These weights are based on the combined CPS/SCHIP baseweights. The layout for these files is in Table A of the attachment.


The ATUS sample processed through replicate weighting for a given ATUS quarter will consist of CPS records from 6 previous months, beginning 7 months before the last ATUS processing month of the quarter. For example, if the quarter January-March 2006 needs to be weighted, Output Files 2 through 7 would be August 2005 through January 2006. These weights are used as the starting weights for the ATUS replicate weighting. Give these files the following name and place a copy of each in the following directory on the ESPB machine in DSD:


/espb/timeuse/dsmd2006/<mmmyy>atu_pu.sas7bdat


    1. Output File 8: ATUS Replicate Weight Output File


This is a combined file of Input Files 1 through 3 with ATUS replicate weights added for all ATUS weighting stages. Give this file the following name and place a copy in the following directory on the ESPB machine in DSD:


/espb/timeuse/processing/weight/wt_<yyyy>q<b>_2ndmth.sas7bdat


where yyyy is the year and b is the quarter (1, 2, 3, or 4).


    1. Output File 9: ATUS File for BLS Analysis (Public-Use)


This quarterly file contains questionnaire data, BWGT0 through BWGT160 (full-sample and public-use replicate weights reduced to the CPS national sample and adjusted for ATUS stratum subsampling), and FINLWGT0 through FINLWGT160 (full-sample and public-use replicate weights after 3 steps of raking: gender/race-ethnicity/day-of-week, gender/household type/educational attainment/day-of-week, and age/gender/day-of-week).


Note: Due to public disclosure concerns BLS receives a public-use file for analysis that results from performing the replicate weighting detailed in this specification on ATUS sample records that have their original stratum and PSU codes removed. There are pseudo-stratum and pseudo-cluster codes on this file for a user to create their own replicates if they so desire, but the replicate weights provided are more accurate. These are referred to as the “public-use” weights.


  1. PROCESS


Note: No rounding should take place during the process. After the process is

complete, round all weights (full-sample and replicate weights) to 4 decimal places on the output files. See Section IV.G for a list of variables that should be rounded.


    1. Run CPS monthly weighting through the first-stage adjustment using

public-use replicate factors


Doc.# ESTWGT2000-13R outlines the steps for running the CPS monthly weighting through the first-stage using replicate factors (see Sections V.A through V.G of [6]). The process for public-use ATUS replicate weighting is similar with the following exceptions:


  1. We omit Sections V.A through V.C of [6] which are identical for the ATUS weighting, and just use the weight after these steps (HWWCWGT) from Input Files 4 to 9.


  1. Section V.D in [6] works with internal unperturbed data and internal replicate factors. Creating the public-use replicate weights is similar to this step, but we use the public-use replicate factors and a different match key. These changes are described below.


Assign each interviewed or noninterviewed record 161 initial public-use replicate weights. Each initial public-use replicate weight is the full-sample weight after the weighting control factor (HWWCWGT) (in [6] (WCF)) adjusted by a replicate factor. There are 161 replicate factors (denoted f0, f1, f2, ..., f160) for each record on the public-use replicate factor file (Input File 10). The 0th replicate sample is the full-sample. Consequently, its associated replicate fac­tor for all sample units has a value of 1.0000. The public-use replicate factor file is a hit-level file and represents the entire universe of segments selected for sample throughout the entire decade.


To obtain the 161 initial public-use replicate weights:


a. Sort each of the CPS internal microdata files (Input Files 4 to 9) by

CPS/SCHIP sample flag (GECPSCHP), stratification PSU (GESTRPSU), county (GECO), frame (GEFRAME), and final hit number (GEHITNO).


b. Sort the public-use replicate factor file (Input File 10) by CPS/SCHIP

sample flag (GECPSCHP), stratification PSU (GESTRPSU), county (GECO), frame (GEFRAME), and final hit number (GEHITNO).


  1. Match the records on each of the CPS internal microdata files (Input Files 4 to 9) to the public-use replicate factor file (Input File 10) by the CPS/SCHIP sample flag (GECPSCHP), stratification PSU (GESTRPSU), county (GECO), frame (GEFRAME), and final hit number (GEHITNO).


  1. Calculate the 0th public-use replicate weight (W0) by multiplying the

full-sample weight after the weighting control factor (HWWCWGT) (in [6] (WCF)) adjustment by f0, W0 = HWWCWGT x f0 = WCF x f0.


Note: f0 = 1.0000.


e. Calculate the 1st public-use replicate weight (W1) by multiplying the full-sample weight after the weighting control factor (HWWCWGT) (in [6] (WCF)) adjustment by f1, W1  = HWWCWGT x f1= WCF x f1.


f. Repeat in the same manner for the remaining replicate factors (f2, f3, ...

f160), Wr = HWWCWGT x fr = WCF x fr, where r = 2, ..., 160.


This yields an array of 161 initial public-use replicate weights for each record: W0, W1, ..., W160.


Notes:


• The public-use replicate factor file (Input File 10) is provided for

total variance only.


• All interview and noninterview records should match to a record on

the public-use replicate factor file, but the public-use replicate factor file will contain records that do not have a corresponding interview or

noninterview record in a particular month.


• Exclude the Type B and first-month Type C noninterviewed

records from the remainder of the processing. These records will

contain only the base­weight, the baseweight after the weighting

control factor has been applied, and the set of 161 public-use replicate

weights.


  1. We continue the process by following Sections V.F and V.G in [6]. These two steps are unchanged. These will be Output Files 2 through 7; however, we subset to MIS 8 because the ATUS sample is drawn from the CPS interviewed cases from the previous month’s retiring rotation group. See Reference [2] for the ATUS sampling specifications.

Note: The CPS branch in DSMD will temporarily run these steps until

DSD-CPS can take over the processing of the ATUS public-use replicate

weights (Output Files 2 through 7). CPSB will run the months for the

2006 weighting until DSD can take over this processing. We assume

that will take place before the 2007 ATUS weighting.


    1. Determine ATUS Cases Ineligible for Weighting


Working from Input Files 1 to 3, and based on the final outcome codes, identify which ATUS sample cases from the edited files are not eligible for weighting. Examples of an ineligible ATUS case would be:


  1. a designated person who was institutionalized during the ATUS interviewing period,

  2. a designated person who died prior to the first designated day of interviewing,

  3. a designated person who moved from the household,

  4. a designated person who was in the military during the ATUS interviewing period.


Create a flag for weighting eligibility (WGTELG). Assign a value of ‘0’ for ineligible cases and a value of ‘1’ for eligible cases. Use the following table to assign WGTELG:


ICATI

ATUS Final Outcome Code OUTCOME =

Updated (WebCATI)

TUFINALCODE

Updated

(WebCATI)

TUFC_SUB

DESCRIPTION OF OUTCOME

Assign WGTELG =

01

001

--

Fully completed interview

1

02

002

--

Sufficient partial interview

1

032

NA

NA

Sufficient partial interview

1

043

NA

NA

Partial not complete at closeout

1

07-16

020

--

Out of scope cases

0

17

021

001

Household moved since last contact

0

18

021

002

Household absent, ill or hospitalized for duration of field period

1

19

021

003

Household institutionalized for duration of field period

0

21

024

--

Unconvertible language barrier

1


025

001

Unconvertible hearing barrier

1

22

022

--

Unpublished or unlisted phone number

1

23

022

--

Only phone number incorrect or problem dialing number

1

24

020

--

Household entirely occupied by armed forces

0

25

020

--

Household with all members URE

0

26

020

--

Household vacant

0


294

NA


Other noninterview

1

100

172

001

Case deleted in sample reduction


0

104

172

002

Invalid input

1

106

176

--

Congressional case, deleted at congressional request

1

109 – 112

179

181

--

Hostile break-off codes

1

113

183

--

Closeout due to unproductive call counter

1

1145

NA


Other assessor noninterview, type 2

1

116

186

--

Pre-refusal based on explicit refusal or hostile break-off

1

118

188

001

Uncompleted callbacks; unable to contact on callback

1

119

188

002

Temporarily unavailable – absent, ill, or hospitalized

1

120

188

003

Temporarily unavailable – institutionalized

0

121

191

--

Language barrier

1

NA

192

--

Hearing barrier

1

122

59

--

Other supervisory referral

1

123

193

--

Privacy Detector

1

124

194

--

Never contacted, confirmed number

1

125

195

--

Never contacted, unconfirmed number

1

127

199

--

Never tried

1


230

--

Less than 5 activities in the core diary.


1


231

--

More than 3 hours of don’t know/refuse time in core diary.


1


232

--

More than 3 hours of don’t know/refuse time in core diary and less than 5 activities in the core diary.

1


233

--

Diary hit maximum number of activities before reaching 24 hours

1


    1. Create Preliminary Public-Use Replicate Weights for Variance Estimation


      1. Match the Edited ATUS Data Files (Input Files 1 to 3) to the Public-Use Replicate Weight Files (Output Files 2 through 7). The match variables will be CPS sample month (HRMONTH), CPS longitudinal identifier (HRLONGID), and line number within housing unit for the correct person sampled (PULINENO). There will be many records on the replicate weight files that are not matched to an ATUS sample record, but each ATUS sample record should match to exactly one record on the replicate weight file. The variables FSWGT0 through FSWGT160 will come from the Public-Use Replicate Weight Files (Output Files 2 through 7). As a result of the matching, you should have 161 first-stage weights for each record on the ATUS data file. These are referred to as public-use replicate weights.


GENERAL NOTE ON REPLICATE WEIGHTING: Subsequent stages of the ATUS weighting will be done 161 times, once for the full-sample (replicate 0) and once for each of the 160 replicates. In the ATUS weighting adjustments described in the next section (Section D.), the weights for each replicate will be adjusted by the same set of factors, since this involves multiplying the initial weights by a series of constants. However, the adjustments in Sections E. and F. will result in different adjustment factors being applied to each replicate.


Note: Perform all following processes as specified for the full-sample and all 160 replicates. In other words, when STSUBWGT is assigned in Process D.2, assign STSUBWGT0,…, STSUBWGT160. Eventually, the following sets of variables should be calculated for each ATUS sample record:


STSUBWGT0-STSUBWGT160

STRTMWGT0-STRTMWGT160

BWGT0-BWGT160

NIWGT0-NIWGT160

FINLWGT0-FINLWGT160


    1. Apply Adjustment Factors to Account for Subsampling from CPS (by

Replicate)


These factors adjust the weights of the selected person records to account for the fact that they are a subsample of the CPS interviewed cases from the previous month’s retiring rotation group (MIS 8). See Reference [2] for the ATUS sampling specifications.


      1. Use all ATUS sample records (eligible interviewed, eligible not interviewed, and not eligible) with a reference day in the calendar month being processed.


      1. Multiply the first-stage weight (FSWGT0-FSWGT160) by the ATUS state subsampling factor (TUSI) obtained during the sampling operation. The resulting weight is the ATUS weight after the state subsampling adjustment (STSUBWGT0-STSUBWGT160).

      1. Multiply the resulting weight (STSUBWGT0-STSUBWGT160) by the ATUS stratum subsampling factor (HHSI) obtained during the sampling operation. The resulting weight is the ATUS weight after the stratum subsampling adjustment (STRTMWGT0-STRTMWGT160).


      1. Multiply the resulting weight (STRTMWGT0-STRTMWGT160) by the ATUS within-household subsampling factor (HHSIZE) obtained during the sampling operation. The resulting weight is the ATUS weight after the household subsampling adjustment. This is also the ATUS baseweight (BWGT0-BWGT160).


So, BWGTk = FSWGTk x TUSI x HHSI x HHSIZE

where k=0,…,160.


      1. Do NOT process ineligible sample cases further.


    1. Perform the ATUS Noninterview Adjustment (by Replicate)


The ATUS noninterview adjustment increases the weights of interviewed person records to account for eligible sample persons (WGTELG=1) who were not interviewed in the ATUS. Only interviewed records are carried through the weighting adjustments that follow the ATUS noninterview adjustment. ATUS final outcome codes of ‘01’ and ‘02’ constitute completed interview cases.


      1. Classify the ATUS interviewed and eligible noninterviewed records within each replicate into 14 cells, according to their assigned reference day (i.e., REFERDAY= 1, 2, …, 7) and if they received an incentive to respond (i.e., INCNTFLG=0, 1).


      1. Compute the ATUS noninterview adjustment factor for each cell:


        1. For each cell, tally:


          1. The weighted count of ATUS interviewed cases (use the ATUS base-weight, BWGT0-BWGT160),


          1. The weighted count of ATUS eligible (both interviewed and noninterviewed) cases (using BWGT0-BWGT160).


        1. Calculate the ATUS noninterview adjustment factor for each cell by dividing the weighted count of ATUS eligible cases by the weighted count of ATUS interviewed cases.


      1. Multiply the ATUS replicate baseweight for each interviewed case by the appropriate adjustment factor from Step 2.b. Call the resulting weight the ATUS noninterview weight (NIWGT0-NIWGT160).


Note: Only seven cells were used for the initial ATUS nonresponse adjustment based on the seven categories of the assigned reference day (REFERDAY). However, the response rates for persons receiving incentives to participate were different from those not receiving incentives. To help reduce nonresponse bias we included the incentive flag (INCNTFLG) in defining 14 nonresponse weighting cells instead of the original 7.


    1. Calculate ATUS Controls


      1. For these controls, use the CPS internal microdata file (Input File 11), the CPS second-stage replicate weight file for 15 year olds (Input File 12), and the CPS composite replicate weight file (Input File 13) from the middle month of the ATUS quarter being processed. For example, when processing the ATUS for January-March 2006, use the CPS February 2006 files for Input Files 11, 12, and 13, denoted respectively as follows:


feb06cps.sas7bdat

ssrp0206.sas7bdat

cmrp0206.sas7bdat


      1. Match the internal microdata file (Input File 11) to the two internal replicate weight files (Input Files 12 and 13) on HRLONGID and PULINENO to add the replicate weights to the microdata file. Use only records from the microdata file where internal PRPERTYP = 1, 2, or 3.


      1. Assign a household type


        1. If a household (designated by a unique value for HRLONGID) has any member with PEAGE between (and including) 0 and 17 (any member meeting the ATUS definition of child), then assign a household type HTYPE = 1.

        2. Otherwise, assign HTYPE = 2.

        3. Make sure that all records with the same value of HRLONGID receive the same value of HTYPE.

        4. After assigning HTYPE to every record, keep only records with PRPERTYP=2.


      1. Assign the replicate control weights


Use the CPS composite replicate weights for persons age 16 and older. The CPS composite replicate weights do not exist for 15-year-olds, so use the CPS replicate weights after the second-stage adjustment instead for these records. Each person-record should have 161 replicate control weights assigned to it, CONWGT0- CONWGT160.


        1. If PEAGE >= 16 then set CONWGTX = CMWGTX, X = 0 to 160.

        2. If PEAGE = 15 then set CONWGTX = SSWGTX, X = 0 to 160.


      1. Compute controls


        1. Assign information for day equalization values as in Table 1. For example, the initial value cells for January through March 2006 would contain 65 days for Monday through Friday, and 25 days for Saturday and Sunday, to make a total of 90 days.


Table 1: Day adjustment values

Day of the Week

Number of days in the interview quarter

Monday – Friday


Saturday-Sunday


Total



        1. For Table 2 controls, sum CONWGT0 for each record assigned to a cell and multiply by the day adjustment factor from Table 1 to get the control value for that cell. For example, for the first quarter of 2006, this is 65 for weekdays (referday=1) and 25 for weekends (referday=2). Assign each record to one column in Table 2 using the appropriate identifying variables. Within the column, put each record in two cells: for referday=1 and for referday=2.


Note: Use the same controls for the full-sample and for each replicate for Table 2.


        1. Assign each record to a cell in Table 3 for referday=1 using the appropriate identifying variables. Then place a copy of the record in the corresponding cell for referday=2. As on Table 2, each record will be placed in two cells: one for referday=1 and one for referday=2. You will create 161 replicate controls for each Table 3 cell. For the full-sample controls (or replicate 0 controls) sum CONWGT0 for each record assigned to that cell and multiply by the day adjustment factor from Table 1. For example, for the first quarter of 2006, this is 65 for referday=1 and 25 for referday=2. For replicate 1 controls sum CONWGT1 for each record assigned to that cell and multiply by the day adjustment factor. Continue in this manner until you have calculated 161 replicate controls.


Note: Use the 161 replicate controls for Table 3. You will use a different control for each replicate. For example, use the sum of CONWGT0 multiplied by the day adjustment factor as controls for replicate 0, use the sum of CONWGT1 multiplied by the day adjustment factor as controls for replicate 1, … , use the sum of CONWGT160 multiplied by the day adjustment factor as controls for replicate 160.


        1. Assign each record to one cell in Table 4 using the appropriate identifying variables. Place a copy of each record in two cells: one for referday=1 and one for referday=2. As in Tables 2 and 3, each record will be in two cells: one for referday=1 and one for referday=2. For Table 4 controls, sum CONWGT0 for each record assigned to a cell and multiply by the day adjustment factor from Table 1 to get the control value for that cell. For example, for the first quarter of 2006, this is 65 for referday=1 and 25 for referday=2.


Note: Use the same controls for the full-sample and for each replicate

for Table 4.




Table 2: Step 1 Controls




Reference

Day

Hispanic

(PEHSPNON = 1)

Non-Hispanic (PEHSPNON < > 1)

Black

(PRBLNONB= 1)

Non-Black

(PRBLNONB= 2)

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX = 2)

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX = 2)

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX = 2)

Weekday

(REFERDAY6=1)







Weekend

(REFERDAY=2)








Table 3: Step 2 Controls





Day of

Week

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX=2)

Educational Attainment HS or less

(PREACAT=1 or 2)

Educational Attainment

More than HS

(PREACAT = 3, 4, or 5)

Educational Attainment HS or less

(PREACAT = 1 or 2)

Educational

Attainment

More than HS

(PREACAT

= 3, 4, or 5)

Household Type, with children

(HTYPE=1)

Weekday

(REFERDAY=1)





Weekend

(REFERDAY=2)





Household Type, without children

(HTYPE=2)

Weekday

(REFERDAY=1)





Weekend

(REFERDAY=2)






Table 4: Step 3 Controls


Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX=2)


Weekday

(REFERDAY

=1)

Weekend

(REFERDAY=2)

Weekday

(REFERDAY=1)

Weekend

(REFERDAY=2)

AGE

(PEAGE)





15-19





20-24





25-29





30-34





35-39





40-44





45-49





50-54





55-59





60-64





65-69





70-74





75 and older






6. Perform the raking (by replicate)


The raking is a three-step, iterative procedure which adjusts the weights for the ATUS sample cases so that:


  1. weighted estimates of persons in various gender/race-ethnicity/day-of-week7 categories from the ATUS match CPS estimates,


  1. estimates from the ATUS match composited estimates from the CPS for gender, household composition, educational attainment, and day of the week ,8


        1. estimates from the ATUS match composited estimates from the CPS for age, gender, and day of the week.


When finished, the ATUS weights should reflect the distribution of days in the quarter consistent with the civilian noninstitutional population (CNP) age 15 and over.


The gender/race-ethnicity/day-of-week adjustment will be performed first (this is Step 1). The gender/household type/educational attainment/day-of-week adjustment to CPS estimates will follow (this is Step 2). The age/gender/day-of-week adjustment will be performed third (this is Step 3). Then a second gender/race-ethnicity/day-of-week adjustment will be performed, followed by another gender/household type/educational attainment/day-of-week adjustment to CPS estimates, and a second age/gender/day-of-week adjustment. The cycle will be repeated for 6 iterations. The raking will be at the national level only.

ITERATION 1, STEP 1:


  1. Assign the ATUS interviewed records for the month being processed to the following cells based on gender, race/ethnicity, and day of the week:


Table 5: Definition of Step 1 Control Cells



Reference

Day

Hispanic

(PEHSPNON = 1)

Non-Hispanic (PEHSPNON < > 1)

Black

(PRBLNONB= 1)

Non-Black

(PRBLNONB= 2)

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX = 2)

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX = 2)

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX = 2)

Weekday

(REFERDAY=1,2,3,4, or 5)







Weekend

(REFERDAY=6 or 7)







  1. Sum the replicate weights after noninterview adjustment (NIWGT0-NIWGT160) for all of the records assigned to each cell.


  1. Compute the Step 1, Iteration 1 factor by dividing the population control computed for the cell by the sum of the replicate weights of the records assigned to that cell.


  1. Multiply the replicate weight after noninterview adjustment (NIWGT0-NIWGT160) by the appropriate Iteration 1, Step 1 factor computed in 3. The variable containing this value will be named f11. For the replicates, add an underscore to clarify the variable name. In other words, the replicate weights at this point should be named f11_0 through f11_160.


ITERATION 1, STEP 2:


  1. Assign each record to the appropriate cell in the following table:


Table 6: Definition of Step 2 Control Cells

Based upon ATUS variable




Day of

Week

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX=2)

Educational Attainment HS or less

(PREACAT=1 or 2)

Educational Attainment

More than HS

(PREACAT = 3, 4, or 5)

Educational Attainment HS or less

(PREACAT = 1 or 2)

Educational

Attainment

More than HS

(PREACAT

= 3, 4, or 5)

Household Type, with children


Weekday

(REFERDAY=1,2,3,4, or 5)





Weekend

(REFERDAY=6 or 7)





Household Type, without children


Weekday

(REFERDAY=1,2,3,4, or 5)





Weekend

(REFERDAY=6 or 7)






  1. Sum the replicate weights after Iteration 1, Step 1 for the records assigned to each cell.


  1. Compute the adjustment factor for Iteration 1, Step 2 by dividing the replicated control total for each cell in Table 6 by the sum of the replicate weights for the records assigned to each cell.


  1. Multiply the replicate weights after Iteration 1, Step 1 by the appropriate Iteration 1, Step 2 factor computed in 3. The variable containing this value will be named f21. For the replicates, add an underscore to clarify the variable name. In other words, the replicate weights at this point should be named f21_0 through f21_160.


ITERATION 1, STEP 3:


  1. Assign each record to the appropriate cells in the following table:


Table 7: Definition of Step 3 Control Cells



Based upon ATUS Age

Male

(PESEX=1)

Female

(PESEX=2)

Weekday

(REFERDAY

=1,2,3,4, or 5)

Weekend

(REFERDAY=6 or 7)

Weekday

(REFERDAY=1,2,3,4, or 5)

Weekend

(REFERDAY=6 or 7)

15-19





20-24





25-29





30-34





35-39





40-44





45-49





50-54





55-59





60-64





65-69





70-74





75 and older






  1. Sum the replicate weights after Iteration 1, Step 2 for the records assigned to each cell.


  1. Compute the adjustment factor for Iteration 1, Step 3 by dividing the replicated control total for each cell in Table 7 by the sum of the replicate weights for the records assigned to each cell.


  1. Multiply the replicate weights after Iteration 1, Step 2 by the appropriate Iteration 1, Step 3 factor computed in 3. The variable containing this value will be named f31. For the replicates, add an underscore to clarify the variable name. In other words, the replicate weights at this point should be named f31_0 through f31_160.

ITERATIONS 2 –6:


Use the replicate weights computed in 4 above (f31_0 through f31_160) as the initial weights (in place of the NIWGTS) for the Iteration 2, Step 1, raking adjustment for gender/race-ethnicity/day-of-week. Repeat Steps 1, 2, and 3 a total of six times, each time using the replicate weights from the most recent iteration and step. Name the variables f12 through f16, f22 through f26, and f32 through f36. The second character of the variable name is the step number; the third character is the iteration number. Convergence is achieved when the estimate for the cell equals the control for the cell, or if not equal, is within some specified tolerance.


The ATUS weight after raking (FINLWGT0-FINLWGT160) will be the weight after the noninterview adjustment, multiplied by the product of all 18 factors computed in the six iterations of the raking. There will be one value of FINLWGT for each ATUS interviewed sample case for each replicate: FINLWGT0,…,FINLWGT160.


G. Rounding


Round all weights (full-sample and replicate weights) to 4 decimal

places on the output files. The following variables should be rounded:


STSUBWGT0-STSUBWGT160

STRTMWGT0-STRTMWGT160

BWGT0-BWGT160

NIWGT0-NIWGT160

FINLWGT0-FINLWGT160

  1. VERIFICATION


Notify the CPS Branch, DSMD when Output Files 1 through 8 and Input Files 1 to 3 and 12 to 13 are available. Once notified, the CPS branch will verify Output File 8 by creating an independent version of this file and comparing their results to Output File 8. The verification programs are located on the PC in the shared directory: M:\ADC-CPHISD\CPSB\ATUS\Repwgting\Prod.


Below is a list of the programs that will be used to verify the public-use ATUS replicate weighting, followed by a brief description:


    1. Program 1


Program name: Tus00Wgt0805Pu2006Masterver_01.sas


Description: Remotely connects to the DSD, ESPB, and DSMDE1 machines (you will need an account on all three machines. Log in to each machine separately). Runs the full CPS replicate weighting through the second stage (you will need to change the %let statements to indicate the correct filenames, months, years, and libref. You will need to change the libnames to reflect the months which correspond to the current quarter. Run the libnames even though they are commented out).


    1. Program 2


Program name: Tus00Wgt0107Pu2006Repwgt_01.sas


Description: Selects the correct records for ATUS households and persons.


    1. Program 3


Program name: Tus00Wgt0107Pu2006Controls_01.sas


Description: Creates control cells from the CPS internal microdata file and adjusts for the number of weekdays, Saturdays, and Sundays in a month.


    1. Program 4


Program name: Tus00Wgt0107Pu2006Raking_01.sas


Description: Rakes the ATUS cells to the control cells.


    1. Program 5


Program name: Tus00Wgt0805Pu2006Compare_01.sas


Description: Compares DSD weights to the verification weights we have created and outputs only those records where weights differ by more than 0.000001. Since the weight on the internal microdata file is only carried to 4 decimal places, this difference contains 2 decimal places more than the output weights. The output weights should still match exactly when read with only 4 decimal places. There shouldn’t be many records, maybe none.


  1. TIMING


These weighting programs will be used for weighting of ATUS files from January 2006 through December 2006. See Doc.#ATUS-13 for weighting from January 2005 through December 2005 [3]. See Doc.#ATUS-12-R for weighting from January 2004 through December 2004 [4]. See Doc.#ATUS-06-R for weighting prior to January 2004 [5].

  1. CONTACT PERSONS


Phawn Letourneau, CPSB/DSMD, x 35942

Andy Zbikowski, CPSB/DSMD, x35939

Carol Gunlicks, CPSB/DSMD, x34241


  1. REFERENCES


[1] Memorandum from A. Tupek to C. Bowie, “American Time Use Survey (ATUS) Specifications for Sampling (ATUS-03),” dated March 7, 2003.

[2] Memorandum from A. Tupek to C. Bowie, “Changes to the American Time Use Survey (ATUS) Specifications for Sampling due to Sample Redesign (ATUS-11-R),” dated March 30, 2005.

[3] Memorandum from A. Tupek to C. Landman, “Weighting Specifications for The American Time Use Survey for 2005 (Doc.#ATUS-13),” dated July 21, 2006.

[4] Memorandum from A. Tupek to C. Bowie, “Weighting Specifications for The American Time Use Survey for 2004 (Doc.#ATUS-12-R),” dated August 26, 2005.

[5] Memorandum from A. Tupek to C. Bowie, “Revised Weighting Specifications for the American Time Use Survey (ATUS) (ATUS-06-R),” dated October 5, 2004.

[6] Memorandum from Ruth Ann Killion to Cheryl Landman, “Basic Weighting Specifications for the Current Population Survey Including Replicate Weighting (ESTWGT2000-13R),” dated May 2, 2007.

[7] Memorandum from A. Tupek to C. Bowie, “Changes to the American Time Use Survey (ATUS) Specifications for Sampling (ATUS-08),” dated December 3, 2003.


Attachment


cc: K. Shelley (BLS) K. Creighton

J. Stewart H. McGowan

H. Frazis X. Guan

E. Robison S. Kim

K. Robertson J. Posey

J. Montcalm (DSD) P. Flanagan (DSMD)

C. Laskey CPS Branch


M:\ADC\CPHIS\CPSB\MEMOS-C\ATUS\ATUS-16.DOC




Table A: Layout of Public-Use Replicate Weights File



Variable


Description


Household (HH) or Person (P)


Format/Valid Entries


HRLONGID


Housing Unit Identifier


HH


15 characters. Uniquely identifies a case from month to month


HRMONTH


CPS Month of Interview


HH


01-12


HRYEAR


CPS Year of Interview


HH


00-99


PULINENO


Line number within housing unit


P


01-16


FSWGT0


Public-Use First-stage weight (full-sample)


P


9 characters with 4 implied decimals


FSWGT1-FSWGT160


Public-Use First-stage replicate weights


P


9 characters with 4 implied decimals




1 For ATUS, an adult must be at least 18 years old. This hierarchical classification system assumes that a household does not fall into the previous category. For example, a household classified with at least one child between 6 and 17 inclusive does not have any children under age 6.

2 A final outcome code of ‘003’ was only possible for cases introduced before January 1, 2003; this outcome code no longer exists.

3 A final outcome of ‘004’ will be converted to the outcome ‘002’.

4 There is no WebCATI counterpart for this ICATI outcome. Review of 2004 data indicates that this outcome was never received in production.

5 There is no WebCATI counterpart for this ICATI outcome. Review of 2004 data indicates that this outcome was never received in production.


6 The variable, Referday is not on the CPS internal microdata file (Input file 11) so we created a dummy variable to randomly assign a 1 or 2, since half of the ATUS sample is assigned to weekdays and half is assigned to weekends. Each record on the control file is duplicated. One copy of the record will have referday=1 and the other will have referday=2.

7 Estimates are adjusted to account for increased number of interviews on the weekends and unequal frequencies of each day of the week in a particular quarter.

8 Except for 15-year-olds, for whom composite estimates are not calculated. We used CPS second-stage weights for 15-year-olds, as specified in IV.F.4.

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