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Main Authors: Powers, Randall, Morris, Darcy Steeg, Eltinge, John, Martinez, Wendy
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.00175
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author Powers, Randall
Morris, Darcy Steeg
Eltinge, John
Martinez, Wendy
author_facet Powers, Randall
Morris, Darcy Steeg
Eltinge, John
Martinez, Wendy
contents Over the past decade, researchers have focused increasing levels of attention on the use of survey and non-survey data to inform decision-making by multiple stakeholders. Work with such data generally requires extensive exploration before a statistics practitioner focuses on specific steps in model building and inference. For many of the resulting initial exploratory analyses, crucial issues center on the extent to which empirical results may vary over geography and subpopulations. Such information is usually presented in tabular form, which can be difficult for stakeholders and decision makers to understand and to utilize. To address these issues, this paper uses data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to illustrate a suite of tools known as linked micromaps. These applications show how linked micromaps can help stakeholders better understand and view descriptive statistics for populations and subpopulations, explore multivariate relationships and ordinal structure, and discover patterns of heterogeneity across time and space. In addition, this paper comments briefly on the prospective use of linked micromaps in model-building and analysis of multiple components of uncertainty.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2605_00175
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Using Linked Micromaps to Explore Complex Structures in Official Statistics
Powers, Randall
Morris, Darcy Steeg
Eltinge, John
Martinez, Wendy
Applications
Over the past decade, researchers have focused increasing levels of attention on the use of survey and non-survey data to inform decision-making by multiple stakeholders. Work with such data generally requires extensive exploration before a statistics practitioner focuses on specific steps in model building and inference. For many of the resulting initial exploratory analyses, crucial issues center on the extent to which empirical results may vary over geography and subpopulations. Such information is usually presented in tabular form, which can be difficult for stakeholders and decision makers to understand and to utilize. To address these issues, this paper uses data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to illustrate a suite of tools known as linked micromaps. These applications show how linked micromaps can help stakeholders better understand and view descriptive statistics for populations and subpopulations, explore multivariate relationships and ordinal structure, and discover patterns of heterogeneity across time and space. In addition, this paper comments briefly on the prospective use of linked micromaps in model-building and analysis of multiple components of uncertainty.
title Using Linked Micromaps to Explore Complex Structures in Official Statistics
topic Applications
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.00175