Web Survey Bibliography
Electronic data collection can take on many forms ranging from computer-administered surveys to internet surveys. While the benefits to collecting data electronically are many, obstacles also exist. This paper reviews three major methods of collecting survey data electronically: computer administered surveys, electronic mail surveys, and web surveys. The literature on these methods is reviewed, and the benefits and obstacles of each method are highlighted.
Web survey bibliography - Germany (361)
- Time Measurement And Pre-testing In On-line-Questionnaires; 2002; Mueller, J., Reimer, M.
- 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.
- Ethische Dimensionen der Online-Forschung; 2001; Dzeyk, W.
- Knowledge acquisition, navigation and eye movements from text and hypertext; 2001; Naumann, A., Waniek, J., Krems, J. F.
- Platform-dependent biases in Online Research: Do Mac users really think different?; 2001; Buchanan, T., Reips, U.-D.
- Current Internet science - trends, techniques, results. ; 1999; Reips, U.-D., Batinic, B., Bandilla, W., Bosnjak, M., Graef, L., Moser, K., Werner, A.
- Drop-out caused by JavaScript: "I could not have expected this to happen " - A Web experiment...; 1999; Reips, U.-D., Schwarz, S.
- Getting a foot in the electronic door Understanding why people read or delete electronic mail; 1997; Tuten, T. L.
- Electronic methods of collecting survey data: A review of E-research; 1997; Tuten, T. L.
- The numeric values of rating scales: A comparison of their impact in mail surveys and telephone interviews...; 1994; Schwarz, N., Hippler, H. J.