Web Survey Bibliography
The German Longitudinal Election Study (GLES) is the largest and most ambitious election study held so far in Germany. The project, which is supported by grants of the German Research Foundation (DFG, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft e.V.), aims at observing the political attitudes and predispositions as well as the political behavior of the German electorate in the German elections 2009, 2013, and 2017. The long-term goal is to institutionalize the study as German National Election Study at GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences after the 2017 election. The GLES allows to analyze the electoral behavior of the electorate in cross-sectional and longitudinal perspective as well as in regard to short-term dynamics during the election campaign and long-term processes of social and societal change (Schmitt-Beck et al. 2010). Figure 1 gives an overview of the design of the GLES 2009 and 2013. The Short-term Campaign Panel (component 3) investigates – as well as the Rolling Cross-Section Campaign Survey with Post-Election Panel Wave (RCS, component 2) – the short-term dynamics during the election campaign. In contrast to the RCS the Short-term Campaign Panel observes these processes on the level of the individual. Hence, it enables the researcher to observe and analyze intra-individual information processing and decision processes during the election campaign.
Web survey bibliography - Rossmann, J. (9)
- Why Do Respondents Break Off Web Surveys and Does It Matter? Results From Four Follow-up Surveys; 2014; Rossmann, J., Blumenstiel, J. E., Steinbrecher, M.
- Using Paradata to Predict and to Correct for Panel Attrition in a Web-based Panel Survey; 2014; Rossmann, J., Gummer, T.
- The Short-term Campaign Panel of the German Longitudinal Election Study 2009. Design, Implementation...; 2013; Steinbrecher, M., Rossmann, J.
- Identifying and Mitigating Satisficing in Web Surveys: Some Experimental Evidence; 2013; Rossmann, J.
- Identifying Satisficing Respondents in Web Surveys: A Comparison of Different Response Time-Based Approaches...; 2013; Rossmann, J.
- Interview Duration in Web Surveys: Integrating Different Levels of Explanation; 2013; Rossmann, J., Gummer, T.
- Does Mode Matter? Initial Evidence from the German Longitudinal Election Study (GLES); 2012; Blumenstiel, J. E., Rossmann, J.
- A new approach to the analysis of survey drop-out. Results from Follow-up Surveys in the German Longitudinal...; 2011; Rossmann, J., Blumenstiel, J. E., Steinbrecher, M.
- Breakoff in Web Surveys of the German Longitudinal Election Study (GLES); 2010; Blumenstiel, J. E., Roßmann, J., Steinbrecher, M.