Web Survey Bibliography
The main question addressed in this paper relates to the quality of the data collected via mobile telephone. We ask if it is possible to overcome the difficulties that wireless telephones present in order to collect data of substantive value. Three data sets will be compared. The first two consist of results from identical RDD surveys conducted nationally in 2003, the first carried out by cellular telephone and the second by conventional telephone. The third set comes from the replication in 2003 by the Pew Research Center of their landmark 1997 response rate experiment. To judge by response rates-a standard measure of quality, we would not have much confidence in the matching landline and cellular studies, especially the cellular survey. Both suffer from response rates in the twenty to thirty percent range. The rigorous Pew survey achieved a comparatively high rate of fifty-one percent. Thus it will serve as the gold standard by which we assess the other two surveys. The analysis will focus on the relationships among variables. Preliminary research suggests that few marginal differences in attitudinal and behavioral measures across the three surveys reach statistical significance. However, no study has extensively examined differences in relationships either by mode or by response rate. The matched landline and cellular surveys replicated attitudinal questions from the Pew response rate experiment. For each of these items we first describe the variables that theory and research indicate have the greatest explanatory power. We then apply an appropriate multivariate model to the Pew data. In the last step, we fit the same multivariate models to data from both the cellular and landline surveys. Our purpose is to explain how well these results conform to the theoretical models, paying particular attention to what any differences may reveal about the quality of data collected via mobile phone.
Web Survey Bibliography - The American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) 60th Annual Conference, 2005 (57)
- News Discrepancy and Information Search: The Effects of News Slants on Audiences' Information Search...; 2005; Hwang, H., Heo, K., Lee, S.-Y.
- The Market Value Survey: Ensuring Quality on a Government Web Based Survey; 2005; Flatley, J., Ruston, D.
- A Comparison of an Online Card Sorting Task to a Rating Task; 2005; Thomas, R. K., Bayer, L. R., Johnson, A. M., Behnke, C. S.
- Unintended Consequences of Incentive Induced Response Rate Differences; 2005; Pope, D., Crawford, S. D., Johnson, E. O., McCabe, S. E.
- The Use of Monetary Incentives in the Survey of Income and Program Participation; 2005; Lewis, D., Creighton, K.
- A Comparison of Presidential Candidate Vote Intention Measures in U.S. Elections; 2005; Thomas, R. K., Krane, D., Sanders, M. G., Behnke, C. S.
- An Investigation of Response Difference between Cell Phone and Landline Interviews; 2005; Dipko, S., Brick, P. D., Brick, J. M., Presser, S.
- Mode Effects in Customer Satisfaction Measurement; 2005; Stegier, D.M., Keil, L., Gaertner, G.
- Prompting Efforts to Raise Response Rates for a Web-Based Survey; 2005; Venkataraman, L., Parker, M.
- Vote Over-Reporting: Testing the Social Desirability Hypothesis in Telephone and Internet Surveys; 2005; Holbrook, A. L., Krosnick, J. A.
- The Impact of Follow-up Contacts od Survey Data and Response Rates; 2005; Westin, E., Harmon, M., Levin, K.
- Mixed Mode Data Collection Using Paper and Web Questionnaries. A Cost and Response Rate Comparison in...; 2005; Werner, P., Forsman, G.
- Are Web Options Making a Difference?; 2005; Mooney, G., Rogers, B., Wood, M., Trunzo, D.
- High Response Rate or Better Data Quality? Examining the Trade-offs for an Establishment Survey; 2005; Harris-Kojetin, L., Kiefer, K.
- To Vote or Not to Vote?: A Comparison of Vote Intention Measures; 2005; Thomas, R. K., Sanders, M. G., Smith, R., Behnke, C. S.
- Reporting Standards for Internet Surveys and Polls; 2005; Tychansky, R. S.
- Effect of Respondent Motivation and Tack Difficulty on Nondifferentiation in Ratings: A Test of Satisficing...; 2005; Anand, S., Krosnick, J. A., Mulligan, K., Smith, W., Green, M. C., Bizer, G. Y.
- Comparing Major Survey Firms in Terms of Survey Satisficing: Telephone and Internet Data Collection; 2005; Krosnick, J. A., Nie, N., Rivers, D.
- Response Order Effects in Online Surveys; 2005; Thomas, R. K., Behnke, C. S., Johnson, A. M.
- Causes of Context Effects: How Questionnaire Layout Induces Measurement Error; 2005; Peytchev, A., Tourangeau, R.
- Can You Hear Me Now?: Differences in Vote Behavior in the Cell and Landline Populations; 2005; Albaghal, T.
- Using the Web to Survey College Students: Institutional Characteristics That Influence Survey Quality...; 2005; Crawford, S. D., McCabe, S. E., Inkelas, K. K.
- What They See Is Not What We Intend-Gricean Effects in Web Surveys; 2005; Yan, T.
- Visual Context Effects in Web Surveys; 2005; Couper, M. P., Conrad, F. G., Tourangeau, R.
- Interactive Feedback Can Improve Quality of Responses in Web Surveys; 2005; Conrad, F. G., Couper, M. P., Tourangeau, R., Galesic, M.
- Data Quality Issues in a Multimode Survey; 2005; Wilson, C., Wright, D., Barton, T., Guerino, P.
- Web Survey Methodologies: A Comparison of Survey Accuracy; 2005; Krosnick, J. A., Nie, N., Rivers, D.
- Non-interviews in Mobile Phone Surveys; 2005; Vehovar, V.
- Quality Assessed: Cellular Phone Surveys versus Traditional Telephone Surveys; 2005; Steeh, C. G.
- Testing the Impact of Caller ID Technology on Response Rates in a Mixed Mode Survey; 2005; Trussell, N., Lavrakas, P. J.
- Re-examining Approaches to Achieving High Response Rates on Web-based Surveys of Post-secondary Students...; 2005; Lodato, B. N., Ghadialy, R.
- Qualitative Comparison of Paper and Online Self-Administered Modes; 2005; Grigorian, K. H., Sederstrom, S.
- Evaluating Nonsampling Errors in a Study Comparing Data Collected by Mail and Using the Web; 2005; Lesser, V. M., Newton, L.
- Effectiveness of E-mail and Paper Mail Notifications for Internet Surveys; 2005; Ruggiere, P., Ver Duin, D'Arlene
- Transforming a Paper Survey into a Web-based Survey: Respondent Experiences; 2005; Luyegu, A.
- A Profile of Self-Selecting Web Respondents; 2005; Guerino, P.
- What's Up Doc? Mixing Web and Mail Methods in a Survey of Physicians; 2005; Beebe, T. J., Locke, G. R., Barnes, S. A.
- Predicting Smapled Respondents' Likelihood to Cooperate in a Mail Survey: Part III; 2005; Burks, A. T., Lavrakas, P. J., Bennett, M.
- Sound Bytes: Capturing Audio in Survey Interviews; 2005; Hansen, S. E., Krysan, M., Couper, M. P.
- (Inter) Net Gain? Experiments to Increase Web-Based Response; 2005; Tourkin, S., Cox, S., Parmer, R., Zukerberg, A.
- Does Type of Pre-Notification Affect Web Survey Response Rates?; 2005; Harmon, M., Westin, E., Levin, K.
- Did You Get The Message? Using E-Mail and SMS for Prenotification in Web Surveys; 2005; Neubarth, W., Bosnjak, M., Bandilla, W., Couper, M. P., Kaczmirek, L.
- Analysis of Break-off Patterns in Web Surveys; 2005; Ahsan, S., Broach, R. J.
- The Effect of Incentives on Two Physician Mail Surveys: A Response Rate Comparison; 2005; Christian, J.
- Value and Timing Strategies in Prize Draws: A Further Examination of the Immediacy Effect in Web Surveys...; 2005; Tuten, T. L., Galesic, M., Bosnjak, M.
- Comparative Analyses of Parallel Paper, Phone, and Web Surveys With and Without Incentives: What Differences...; 2005; Olsen, D., Call, V., Wygant, S.
- Characteristics Related to Cell Phone Status: Why Generation Y Should be Targeted; 2005; Hancock, L.
- Mode Effects for Hybrid Telephone/Internet Surveys and Reaching Cellphone-Only Households; 2005; Kulp, D., Herrmann, M., Dutwin, D., Lavine, S.
- In Search of Equivalency across Modes: Experimental Results Comparing Alternative Question Formats for...; 2005; Christian, L. M., Dillman, D. A., Smyth, J. D.
- Survey Mode Effects: Comparison between Telephone and Web; 2005; Speizer, H., Baker, R. P., Schneider, K.
