Web Survey Bibliography
A typology of panel conditioning effects and an empirical study examining the phenomenon are presented. The experiment on panel conditioning using a typical tracking study questionnaire shows that high frequency repeat interviews lead to a small degree of conditioning but low frequency repeat interviews seem to have no or very marginal effects. The study indicates the need for Panel Management Rule Books on repeat interviewing to be empirically based.
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Web survey bibliography - ESOMAR (16)
- 28 Questions to Help Buyers of Online Samples; 2015; Cape, P. J.; Phillips, A.; Baker, R.; Cooke, M.; Ribeiro, E.; Terhanian, G.
- Global market research 2013; 2013
- Global market research 2012; 2012
- New Esomar survey on use of cookies and tracking technologies; 2011
- Global market research 2011; 2011
- 26 questions to help research buyers of online samples; 2008
- Using global online panels; 2008; Pearson, C., Smith, E., Ridlen, R., Zhang, H., Cooper, A
- The quest for on-line quality research; 2008; Rhall, T., Fine, B.
- ICC/ESOMAR International code on market and social research; 2007
- Global market research 2007; 2007
- Web 2.0 & panels. The shift from lectures to conversations; 2006; Cook, M., Buckley, N.
- The effect of conditioning when re-interviewing; 2006; Cartwright, T., Nancarrow, C.
- Global market research 2006; 2006
- Benefits and challenges of multi-sourcing. Understanding differences between sample sources; 2006; de Gaudemar, O.
- Attitudinal differences. Comparing people who belong to multiple versus single panels; 2006; Casdas, D., Fine, B., Menictas, C.
- Assessing individual respondents' quality. An innovative scoring system; 2006; Loeb, C.,Hartmann, A.