Web Survey Bibliography
Title Methods can matter: Where Web surveys produce different results than phone interviews
Author Keeter, S.
Source Pew Research Center: Fact Tank
Year 2016
Access date 28.02.2016
Full text pdf (1.54 MB)
Abstract "Over the past year, Pew Research Center conducted an experiment to see if the mode by which someone was surveyed – in this case, a telephone survey with an interviewer versus a self-administered survey on the Web – would have any effect on the answers people gave. We used two randomly selected groups from our American Trends Panel to do this, asking both groups the same set of 60 questions..."
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Year of publication2015
Web survey bibliography - Pew Research Center (10)
- Evaluating a New Proposal for Detecting Data Falsification in Surveys; 2016; Simmons, K.; Mercer, A. W.; Schwarzer, S.; Courtney, K.
- Methods can matter: Where Web surveys produce different results than phone interviews; 2016; Keeter, S.
- App vs. Web for Surveys of Smartphone Users: Experimenting with mobile apps for signal-contingent experience...; 2015; McGeeney, K.; Keeter, S.; Igielnik, R.; Smith, A.; Rainie, L.
- Tips for Creating Web Surveys for Completion on a Mobile Device; 2015; McGeeney, K.
- U.S. Survey Research: Sampling; 2015
- A Comparison of Results from Surveys by the Pew Research Center and Google Consumer Surveys; 2012; Keeter, S., Christian, L. M.
- Smartphone ownership update: September 2012; 2012; Rainie, L.
- Ebook readings jumps, print book reading declines; 2012; Rainie, L., Duggan, M.
- Adult gadget ownership over time (2006-2012); 2012
- Search and email still top the list of most popular online activities; 2011; Purcell, K.