Web Survey Bibliography
Wide availability, of networked personal computers within organizations has enabled new methods for organizational research involving presentation of research stimuli using Web pages and browsers. The authors provide an overview of the technological challenges for collecting organizational data through this medium as a springboard to discuss the validity of such research and its ethical implications. A review of research comparing Web browser-based research with other administration modalities appears to warrant guarded optimism about the validity of these new methods. The complexity of the technology and researchers' relative unfamiliarity with it have created a number of pitfalls that must be avoided to ensure ethical treatment of research participants. The authors highlight the need for an online research participants' bill of rights and other structures to ensure successful and appropriate use of this promising new research medium.
SAGE Journals Online (full text); Web of Science (abstract); OCLC ECO (full text)
Web survey bibliography (4086)
- Using the Internet to survey patients with diabetes; 1998; Crownover, A. J.
- The 10 commandments of electronic market research; 1998; Buchwald, J.
- Internet focus groups are not focus groups - so don't call them that; 1998; Greenbaum, T.
- Conducting Surveys Over the World Wide Web; 1998; Gould, E., Gurevich, M., Pagerey, P. D.
- The top 10 FAQs about on-line research; 1998; MacElroy, B.
- Development of a Standard E-Mail Methodology: Results of an Experiment; 1998; Schaefer, D. R., Dillman, D. A.
- Using Internet/intranet web pages to collect organizational research data; 1998; Stanton, J. M., Rogelberg, S. G.
- Market research on the web; 1998; McCullough, D.
- What constitutes adoption of the Web: A methodological problem in assessing adoption of the World Wide...; 1998; Abels, E. G., White, M. D., Gordon-Murnane, L.
- Conducting full-profile conjoint analysis over the Internet; 1998; Orme, B., King, C.
- World-Wide Web survey research made easy with WWW Survey Assistant; 1997; Schmidt, W. C.
- Getting a foot in the electronic door Understanding why people read or delete electronic mail; 1997; Tuten, T. L.
- Internet marketing research: resources and techniques; 1997; Forrest, E.
- Feeling thermometers versus 7-point scales. Which are better?; 1997; Alwin, D. F.
- Electronic methods of collecting survey data: A review of E-research; 1997; Tuten, T. L.
- Editing of survey data: How much is enough?; 1997; Grandquist, L., Kovar, J. G.
- Designing rating scales for effective measurernent in surveys; 1997; Krosnick, J. A., Fabrigar, L. R.
- Some Considerations for Conducting an Electronic Mail Study with University Students; 1997; Williams, A. N., Morphew, C. C., Nusser, S. M.
- The Effect of E-Personality on Research Results; 1997; MacElroy, B.
- Search no Further. Yahoo!'s Audience Analysis Project - A Case Study; 1997; Kottler, R. E.
- The Internet: Access grows, policies lag; 1997; Frost, M.
- Research and the Internet: An e-mail survey of sexual orientation; 1997; Sell, R. L.
- The Effect of New Data Collection Technologies on Survey Data; 1997; Nicholls II, W. L., Martin, J.
- Update on the Internet Usage Survey; 1997; Bremer, J.
- A study of factors affecting responses in electronic mail surveys; 1997; Good, K. P.
- On-line focus groups: four approaches that work; 1997; Jacobson, P.
- Are Internet surveys ready for prime time; 1997; Davis, G.
- Conducting On-Line Focus Groups: A Methodological Discussion; 1997; Gaiser, T. J.
- Internet research: still a few hurdles to clear; 1997; Weissbach, S.
- Using the Internet for quantitative survey research; 1997
- Internet surveys: Does WWW stand for "Why waste the work?"; 1997; Eaton, B.
- Assessing Student Attitudes: Computer Versus Pencil-and-Paper Administration; 1997; Antons, C. M., Dilla, B. L., Fultz, M. L.
- Mail Surveys for Election Forecasting? An Evaluation of the Columbus Dispatch Poll; 1996; Krosnick, J. A.
- The VSB-Center savings project: Data collection methods, questionnaires and sampling procedures; 1996; Nyhus, E. K.
- The how and why of response latency measurement in telephone interviews; 1996; Bassili, J. N.
- The Direction of context effects. What determines assimilation or contrast in attitude measurement?; 1996; Sudman, S., Bradburn, N. M., Schwarz, N.
- SUS - A quick and dirty usability scale; 1996; Brooke, J.
- Response latency as a signal to question problems in survey research; 1996; Bassili, J. N., Scott, S. B.
- Psychological sources of context effects in survey measurement; 1996; Sudman, S., Bradburn, N. M., Schwarz, N.
- Cognition and communication: Judgmental biases, research methods, and the logic of conversation; 1996; Schwarz, N.
- Addressing disturbing and disturbed consumer behavior: Is it necessary to change the way we conduct...; 1996; Petty, R. E., Cacioppo, J. T.
- Sampling error and selecting intercoder reliability samples for nominal content categories; 1996; Lacy, S., Riffe, D.
- CGI scripts: Gateways to World-Wide Web power; 1996; Kieley, J. M.
- Evaluation of a computer-assisted self-interview component in a computer-assisted personal interview...; 1996; Couper, M. P., Rowe B.
- Is May Research Ethical?; 1996; Duncan, G. T.
- Virtual research exists, but how real is it; 1996; Roller, M. R.
- Doing the right thing: Ethical cyberspace research; 1996; Boehlefeld, S. P.
- Handling "Don't Know" Survey Responses: The Case of the Slovenian Plebiscite; 1995; Rubin, D. B.; Vehovar, V.; Hal, S. S.
- The effect of computer-assisted interviewing on data quality: A review.; 1995; de Leeuw, E. D., Hox, J., Snijkers, G.
- Subsequent questions may influence answers to preceding questions in mail surveys; 1995; Schwarz, N., Hippler, H. J.