Web Survey Bibliography
As the web becomes more commonly used for survey data collections, many researchers are facing the decision of whether or not to move their new or ongoing research programs to this new mode. Response rates and data collection costs drive many mode decisions, and in this regard, use of the web is no different. Many web surveys have been found to obtain inadequate response rates, and the cost of building the infrastructure to conduct interactive web surveys can be prohibitive. As e-mail samples mature, and the research industry learns how to best capture the attention of the sample members (through appropriate contacts and incentives), the time has come where web surveys can enjoy the same, or better, response rates that have been received with mail or phone data collections. Likewise, as more efficient processes and systems emerge for the sole purpose of online data collections, the costs of conducting a web survey will become more manageable. This paper will provide results from a data collection effort conducted at the University of Michigan in Spring 2001. The data collection, a survey of student drug and alcohol use, was conducted as a mode experiment. Two randomly selected samples were assigned to complete a web survey, or a mail (paper) survey. Each sample consisted of 3500 undergraduate students. The methods used (number of contacts, questionnaire content, etc.) for each mode were comparable to maintain the integrity of the mode comparison. The results of this study and mode comparison demonstrate how successful a web based data collection could be. The response rate for the web mode concluded at over 20% higher than that of the mail mode. The overall costs for each mode showed that when using a web data collection facility with established infrastructure, the web data collection is more efficient.
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Web survey bibliography - 2002 (87)
- Social desirability and self-disclosure online: Integrating media effects with user characteristics; 2002
- Social desirable responding and age on the Internet: older participants in online studies show a higher...; 2002; Reips, U.-D., Stoeber, J., Hahn, A.
- Time Measurement And Pre-testing In On-line-Questionnaires; 2002; Mueller, J., Reimer, M.
- Statistical Data Validation in Web Instruments:An Empirical Study; 2002; Peytchev, A., Petrova, E. A.
- Attitudes of Business Faculty Towards Two Methods of Collecting Teaching Evaluations: Paper vs. Online...; 2002; Dommeyer, C. J., Baum, P., Chapman, K. S., Hanna, R. W.
- Introduction: Psychology and the Internet; 2002; Taylor, J.
- Using the Internet for surveys and health research; 2002; Eysenbach, G., Wyatt, J. C.
- Internet-Based Psychological Experimenting: Five Dos and Five Don'ts; 2002; Reips, U.-D.
- Self-administered questions by telephone: Evaluating interactive voice response; 2002; Tourangeau, R., Steiger, D. M.,
- The Kid's Experimental Psychology Lab: A Web Site for Internet Research with Children; 2002; Frick, A., Reips, U.-D.
- Assessing Internet Questionnaires: The online pretest lab; 2002; Graef, L.
- Understanding the Willingness to Participate in Online-Surveys - The case of E-mail questionnaires; 2002; Bosnjak, M., Batinic, B.
- Conducting Research Surveys via E-mail and the Web; 2002; Schonlau, M., Elliot, M. N., Fricker, R. D.
- From Mail to Web: Improving Response Rates and Data Collection Efficiencies; 2002; Crawford, S. D., McCabe, S. E., Couper, M. P., Boyd, C. J.
- A Comparison Between Mail and Web Surveys: Response Pattern, Respondent Profile, and Data Quality; 2002; Kwak, N., Radler, B. T.
- Have Telephone Surveys a Future in the 21-th century?; 2002; de Leeuw, E. D., Lepkowski, J. M., Kim, S.-W.
- Do it yourself, Web-style; 2002; Glowa, T.
- Using phone methods in a digital age; 2002; Fitzgerald, A.
- Designing a Strategy for Reducing "No Opinion" Responses in Web-Based Surveys; 2002; de Rouvray, C., Couper, M. P.
- Establishing data validity in conjoint: Experiences with Internet-based ‘mega-studies’; 2002; Moskowitz, H., Moskowitz, J., Beckley, J., Mascuch, T., Adams, Ju., Sendros, A., Keeling, C.
- Work-life balance among Croatian employees: role time commitment, work-home interference and well-being...; 2002; Sverko, B. B., Araasic, L., Galesic, M.
- Data collection through web-based technology; 2002; Swartz, R. W., Hancock, C.
- Online Data Collection; 2002; Topp, N. W., Pawloski, B.
- Electronic data collection in Statistic Norway; 2002; Sæbø, H. V., Gloersen, R., Sve, D.
- Citizen Perceptions of Community Policing: Comparing Internet and Mail Survey Responses; 2002; Ballard, C., Prine, R.
- An evaluation of the effect of response formats on data quality in Web surveys; 2002; Heerwegh, D., Loosveldt, G.
- Testing Web Questionnaires; 2002; Crawford, S. D., Baker, R. P.
- Web Surveys: The Effect of Controlling Survey Access using PIN Numbers; 2002; Heerwegh, D., Loosveldt, G.
- (Non)Response bei Web-Befragungen; 2002; Bosnjak, M.
- A Nonresponse Analysis of a Mail-Web Mode Comparison; 2002; Boyd, C. J., Crawford, S. D., McCabe, S. E., Couper, M. P.
- Usability Testing of Web Data Collection Instruments; 2002; Thalji, L., Antunes, M. J., Wiebe, E. F.
- Mode Effect in Web Surveys; 2002; Vehovar, V., Lozar Manfreda, K.
- Nonresponse in Web Surveys; 2002; Vehovar, V., Lozar Manfreda, K., , Batagelj, Z.
- Generalizability Issues in Internet-Based Survey Research: Implications for the Internet Addiction Controversy...; 2002; Bremer, J.
- Collective action in the age of the Internet: Mass communication and online mobilization; 2002; Brunsting, S., Postmes, T.
- Cognitive processes in Web Surveys; 2002; Fuchs, M.
- Ethics of Internet Research: Contesting the Human Subjects Research Model; 2001; Bassett, E. H., O'Riordan, K.