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Hanyu Sun; Angie Kistler; Ryan Hubbard; Brad Edwards; Marcia Swinson-Vick – Field Methods, 2024
There is abundant literature about interviewer effects on the survey process, but studies of interviewer training are quite limited. Previous research has produced mixed findings on how training affects interviewer performance. Trainings are often conducted in person despite the mixed findings. There has been no research that examines the use of…
Descriptors: Training, Performance, Interviews, Surveys
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Claudia Schmiedeberg; Jette Schröder – Field Methods, 2024
Although it has long been acknowledged that interviewers play a crucial role in the survey data collection process, there is little research concerning interviewer effects on how respondents perceive the interview. We investigate whether interviewer effects exist regarding how much respondents report having enjoyed the interview and whether these…
Descriptors: Interviews, Data Collection, Surveys, Attitudes
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Hafsteinn Einarsson; Alexandru Cernat; Natalie Shlomo – Field Methods, 2024
The presentation of survey requests represents an easily modifiable feature of survey communications that can in some contexts affect response propensities. Here, we examine how two features: the framing of the participation request (informed by prospect theory) and the inclusion of targeted appeals based on demographic background (age or…
Descriptors: Surveys, Participation, Foreign Countries, Response Rates (Questionnaires)
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Adrià Fenoy; Michal Bojanowski; Miranda J. Lubbers – Field Methods, 2024
To estimate the distribution of the number of acquaintances of the members of a society, the network scale-up method asks survey respondents about the number of people they know with features for which national statistics are available. While many features have been used for this purpose, first names have been suggested to produce particularly low…
Descriptors: Surveys, Population Groups, Automation, Population Distribution
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Kaylin R. Clements; Jennifer E. Cross; Christopher McCarty; Jennifer N. Solomon – Field Methods, 2024
Social network research often depends on the willingness of respondents to provide personal information about themselves and alters. Survey design strategies that increase willingness to share this information are necessary for social network research to be feasible, especially when name generators are used for sampling because rosters are…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Referral, Maps, Online Surveys
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Jennifer C. Davidson; Dimitar Karadzhov; Graham Wilson – Field Methods, 2024
Cost-effective and user-friendly, mobile phone-assisted methods have remained underutilized in qualitative social science research. The scarce methodological guidance, together with recruitment and ethical challenges, has arguably stifled advancements in this area. COVID-19 exposed the need to better equip researchers with the expertise and tools…
Descriptors: Test Construction, Handheld Devices, Computer Oriented Programs, Surveys
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Piotr Jabkowski; Aneta Piekut – Field Methods, 2024
This study analyzes the consequences of item nonresponse to the question about a household's total net income in the European Social Survey (2008-2018). We recognize two mechanisms in avoiding answering the income question: task complexity and question sensitivity, and apply multilevel logistic regressions to predict the probability of refusals or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Income, Surveys, Social Characteristics
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Jamelia Harris – Field Methods, 2024
Not knowing the population size is a common problem in data-limited contexts. Drawing on work in Sierra Leone, this short take outlines a four-step solution to this problem: (1) estimate the population size using expert interviews; (2) verify estimates using interviews with participants sampled; (3) triangulate using secondary data; and (4)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sample Size, Surveys, Computation
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Aline Duvoisin; Jan-Erik Refle; Claudine Burton-Jeangros; Liala Consoli; Julien Fakhoury; Yves Jackson – Field Methods, 2024
Conducting research among hard-to-reach populations is a difficult endeavor because some of their characteristics are known to be associated with survey nonresponse and panel attrition. In the case of the Parchemins study, which followed undocumented migrants over their process of regularization and during the first years of regularized life in…
Descriptors: Recruitment, Attrition (Research Studies), Surveys, Longitudinal Studies
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Dana Garbarski; Jennifer Dykema; Cameron P. Jones; Tiffany S. Neman; Nora Cate Schaeffer; Dorothy Farrar Edwards – Field Methods, 2024
Ethnoracial identity refers to the racial and ethnic categories that people use to classify themselves and others. How it is measured in surveys has implications for understanding inequalities. Yet how people self-identify may not conform to the categories standardized survey questions use to measure ethnicity and race, leading to potential…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Racial Identification, Classification, Error of Measurement
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Prasanna S. Premkumar; Santhosh Kumar Ganesan; Balaji Pandiyan; Dhivya Kumari Krishnamoorthy; Gagandeep Kang – Field Methods, 2024
Household expenditure data is at the core of efforts to measure living standards, inequality and financial protection against illness. Currently it is mainly derived from recall-based surveys that are time consuming and prone to measurement errors. Diaries are often used as an alternative approach, however this results in fatigue and low…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Telecommunications, Diaries, Surveys
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Htay-Wah Saw; Brady T. West; Mick P. Couper; William G. Axinn – Field Methods, 2024
The American Family Health Study (AFHS) collected family health and fertility data from a national probability sample of persons aged 18-49 between September 2021 and May 2022, using web and mail exclusively. In July 2022, we surveyed AFHS respondents and gauged their willingness to become part of a national web panel that would create novel…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Data Collection, Experimenter Characteristics, Participant Characteristics
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Jannes Jacobsen; Manuel Siegert – Field Methods, 2024
This article analyzes whether response patterns in surveys differ between the general population, regular immigrants, and recent refugees. Analyses show that the address quality of refugees contacted in the first wave of a panel study is worse than that of the general population, but of a similar quality to that of other recent immigrants. Once…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Refugees, Immigrants, Surveys
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Orsola Torrisi; Jethro Banda; Georges Reniers; Stéphane Helleringer – Field Methods, 2024
Guidelines for conducting surveys by mobile phone calls in low- and middle-income countries suggest keeping interviews short (<20 minutes). The evidence supporting this recommendation is scant, even though limiting interview duration might reduce the amount of data generated by such surveys. We recruited nearly 2,500 mobile phone users in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Interviews, Telephone Surveys