Web Survey Bibliography
Title App vs. Web for Surveys of Smartphone Users: Experimenting with mobile apps for signal-contingent experience sampling method surveys
Author McGeeney, K.; Keeter, S.; Igielnik, R.; Smith, A.; Rainie, L.
Source Pew Research Center
Year 2015
Access date 11.08.2016
Full text PDF (840kB)
Abstract
This report utilizes a form of survey known as “signal-contingent experience sampling” to gather data about how Americans use their smartphones on a day-to-day basis. Respondents were asked to complete two surveys per day for one week (using either a mobile app they had installed on their phone or by completing a web survey) and describe how they had used their phone in the hour prior to taking the survey. This report examines whether this type of intensive data collection is possible with a probability-based panel and to understand the differences in participation and responses when using a smartphone app as opposed to a web browser for this type of study.
Access/Direct link Pew Research Center Homepage (full tex)
Year of publication2015
Bibliographic typeReports, seminars
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.