Web Survey Bibliography
As society changes, survey research changes. The declining number of landline-only households in the U.S. has complicated and raised the cost of conducting surveys by telephone. Gone is the near-universal access to residences and greatly reduced is the geographic precision that high-coverage telephone surveys once offered. However, advances in computing power and address-based data files have created an alternative method of sampling known as address-based sampling (ABS). ABS uses Delivery Sequence File (DSF) data from the U.S. Postal Service’s records of every address in the country that can receive mail. The quality of this national list has improved with the push for more automation and efficiency in mail delivery, the growth in geographic information systems applications, and local initiatives to enhance emergency services by assigning standard street addresses even in more rural areas. ABS boasts near-universal coverage and precise geographical targeting. Because ABS is relatively new and often used in mixed-mode surveys, describing its use is valuable. This paper describes a mixed-mode ABS experiment within a statewide survey about recreational activities and demand. The original sample contained 13,880 records and yielded 3,149 responses from 17 geographic strata. Data were collected by web and mail. Addresses were randomly assigned to one of four treatments: mail only, mail with web later, web with mail later and the choice of options offered up front. The response rate was much lower for the web-with-mail-later group. Nearly half of the responses in this group resulted from a single paper mailing. However, one-quarter of respondents from the two treatment groups offering the web mode early on used the web. Some substantive and demographic differences by treatment were observed, but were not problematic. A hybrid protocol – a web-first invitation with multiple postal contacts to nonresponders – might have reduced costs up to 15% compared to a postal-only protocol.
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Web Survey Bibliography - 2012 (526)
- WebSM Study: Overview of Features of Software Packages: SurveyMonkey, QuestionPro, FluidSurveys, Wufoo...; 2012; Cehovin, G.; Vehovar, V.
- WebSM Study: Speed and efficiency of online survey tools; 2012; Cehovin, G.; Vehovar, V.
- Worldwide online research spending; 2012
- What we can learn from unintentional mobile respondents; 2012; Peterson, G.
- Using paradata to explore item-level response times in surveys; 2012; Couper, M. P., Kreuter, F.
- Using multivariate statistics, 6th Edition; 2012; Tabachnick, B. G., Fidell, L. S.
- Unintentional mobile respondents; 2012; Peterson, G.
- Tracking preference expression (DNT); 2012
- The smartphone psychology manifesto; 2012; Miller, G.
- The rise of the "connected viewer"; 2012; Smith, A., Boyles, J. L.
- The practice of social research; 2012; Babbie, E. R.
- The integration of facebook into class management: an exploratory study; 2012; Chou, P. N.
- The effects of item saliency and question design on measurement error in a self-administered survey; 2012; Stern, M. J., Smyth, J. D., Mendez, J.
- The cross platform report. Q2 -2012 - US; 2012
- Speed (necessarily) doesn’t kill: A new way to detect survey satisficing; 2012; Garland, P. et al.
- Smartphone ownership update: September 2012; 2012; Rainie, L.
- Sensitive topics in PC Web and mobile web surveys: Is there a difference?; 2012; Mavletova, A. M., Couper, M. P.
- Selection bias of internet panel surveys: A comparison with a paper-based survey and national governmental...; 2012; Tsuboi, S. et al.
- Screenwise panel: Frequently Asked Questions; 2012
- Research company spotlight - Mobile surveys; 2012
- Redeveloping the research section of Meningitis UK's website — A case study report; 2012; Witt, J. et al.
- Quality in market research. From theory to practice. 2nd Edition; 2012; Harding, D., Jackson, P.
- Participation of mobile users in traditional online studies; 2012; Jue, A.
- Online survey statistics for the mobile future. Updated with Q3 2012 data; 2012
- Ofcom technology tracker Wave 3; 2012
- Ofcom technology tracker Wave 2; 2012
- Not just playing around; 2012; Ewing, T.
- Norme di qualita' Assirm (Assirm quality rules]; 2012
- NBCU enlists Google, ComScore to track multiscreen Olympics viewing; 2012; Spangler, T.
- MRS Guidelines for online reseach; 2012
- More dirty little secrets of online panel research.; 2012
- Mobile email opens report 2nd half 2011; 2012
- Metering mobile usage. Insights from global Arbitron mobile trends panel; 2012; Verkasalo, H.
- Media tracker; 2012
- Measuring the quality of governmental websites in a controlled versus an online setting with the ‘...; 2012; Elling, S. et al.
- Measuring modern media consumption; 2012; Arini, N.
- ISO 20252. Market, opinion and social research-Vocabulary and service requirements, 2nd Edition; 2012
- Is „chapterisation“ a viable alternative to traditional progress indicators ?; 2012; Spicer, R., Dowling, Z.
- Internet use in households and by individual in 2012. Eurostat Statistics in Focus 50/2012; 2012; Seybert, H.
- Internet access - Households and individuals, 2012 part 2; 2012
- Internet access - Households and individuals, 2012; 2012
- Guide to social science data preparation. Best practice throughout the data life cycle; 2012
- Google et Médiamétrie créent une audience bimédia; 2012; Gonzales, P.
- GMI Pinnacle; 2012
- Global market research 2012; 2012
- Flowing with the mainstream. Is mobile market research finally living up to the hype?; 2012; Townsend, L.
- Explaining rising nonresponse rates in cross-sectional surveys; 2012; Brick, J. M., Williams, D.
- Eurobarometer Special surveys: Special Eurobarometer 381; 2012
- Online Surveys 2.0; 2012; Elferink, R.
- The Impact of Academic Sponsorship on Online Survey Dropout Rates; 2012; Allen, P. J., Roberts, L. D.
