Web Survey Bibliography
Title Use of Smartphones as a New Survey Mode: A Feasibility Study
Author Hu, S.; Freedner-Maguire, N.; Dayton, J.; Neff, L.
Year 2015
Access date 16.06.2016
Abstract
New mobile communications technologies provide a unique opportunity for innovation in public health surveillance. Smartphone Web access is immediate, accessible, and confidential, a combination of features that could make it ideal for ongoing surveillance. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the process and outcomes of conducting a population-based survey through Web surveys with smartphone respondents. The study consists of an initial telephone interview to identify smartphone users followed by 2 weekly surveys completed via smartphone. We will determine the following: 1) technological feasibility: whether and under what circumstances smartphones can be used to collect population-based public health and behavior data; 2) quality of the data: evaluating response bias, coverage bias, outcome rates through comparisons of data collected by smartphones vs. landline & cell phones from another survey; 3) cost effectiveness: how much smartphone data collection costs compared to more conventional data collection approaches. As mobile communications continue to evolve, a better understanding of how smartphones can be used to collect data is critical to public health surveillance.
Access/Direct link Joint Statistical Meetings 2015
Year of publication2016
Bibliographic typeConferences, workshops, tutorials, presentations
Web survey bibliography - Freedner-Maguire, N. (5)
- National Estimates of Sexual Minority Women Alcohol Use through Web Based Respondent Driven Sampling...; 2016; Farrell Middleton, D.; Iachan, R.; Freedner-Maguire, N.; Trocki, K.; Evans, C.
- Novel Methodology for Reaching a Statewide Represen tative Sample of Youth Ages 12-18 ; 2016; Freedner-Maguire, N.; ZuWallack, R. S.
- Use of Smartphones as a New Survey Mode: A Feasibility Study ; 2015; Hu, S.; Freedner-Maguire, N.; Dayton, J.; Neff, L.
- Improving Response Rates on Both Landline and Cell Surveys Through the Strategic Use of Caller ID; 2009; Dayton, J. J., Burns, E., Levinson, A., Freedner, N., Hannah, K., Tarallo, B.
- Measuring Health in RDD Surveys: Are Estimates that Exclude the Cell-Only Population Accurate?; 2008; Freedner, N., Holterman, L. A., Hannah, K.