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Kacey Beddoes – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
Despite their many benefits, longitudinal studies are much less common than one-time data collection or pre-post intervention designs. One reason for their scarcity is that longitudinal studies introduce requirements and challenges that non-longitudinal studies do not. One of the biggest challenges is participant attrition. In order to help…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Attrition (Research Studies), Research Problems, Research Methodology
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Roman Auriga; André Pirralha; Friederike Schlücker; Götz Lechner; Anna Passmann – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2025
Mailing campaigns are a way to keep longitudinal survey respondents engaged. While mailings usually include a survey answer request, sometimes respondents are contacted between-waves to update contact information or simply to keep respondent contact. Research on the actual impact of these between-wave contacts on response rates is scarce. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Mail Surveys, Research Methodology
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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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Song, Jieun; Dembo, Robert S.; DaWalt, Leann Smith; Ryff, Carol D.; Mailick, Marsha R. – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2023
Developmental disabilities (DD) research has depended on volunteer and clinical samples, with limited racial/ethnic diversity. This study focused on improving diversity and retention in DD research. The sample included 225 parents with a child with DD and 4,002 parents without children with DD from diverse racial/ethnic groups, drawn from Midlife…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Diversity, Longitudinal Studies, Developmental Disabilities
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Isabella Minderop; Bernd Weiß – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
Preventing panel members from attriting is a fundamental challenge for panel surveys. Research has shown that response behavior in earlier waves (response or nonresponse) is a good predictor of panelists' response behavior in upcoming waves. However, response behavior can be described in greater detail by considering the time until the response is…
Descriptors: Prediction, Models, Behavior Patterns, Attrition (Research Studies)
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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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Jankowsky, Kristin; Schroeders, Ulrich – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2022
Attrition in longitudinal studies is a major threat to the representativeness of the data and the generalizability of the findings. Typical approaches to address systematic nonresponse are either expensive and unsatisfactory (e.g., oversampling) or rely on the unrealistic assumption of data missing at random (e.g., multiple imputation). Thus,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Man Machine Systems, Attrition (Research Studies), Longitudinal Studies
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Chin, Alycia; Couper, Mick P.; Beckett, Dustin – Field Methods, 2021
Longitudinal survey and experimental research is essential for understanding psychological and economic processes, but attrition is a concern. We examine attrition in a 2016 longitudinal randomized controlled trial of more than 13,000 prospective U.S. homeowners, in which participants were invited to up to seven online surveys delivered every two…
Descriptors: Attrition (Research Studies), Longitudinal Studies, Randomized Controlled Trials, Real Estate
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Stadtfeld, Christoph; Snijders, Tom A. B.; Steglich, Christian; van Duijn, Marijtje – Sociological Methods & Research, 2020
Longitudinal social network studies can easily suffer from insufficient statistical power. Studies that simultaneously investigate change of network ties and change of nodal attributes (selection and influence studies) are particularly at risk because the number of nodal observations is typically much lower than the number of observed tie…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Social Networks, Statistical Analysis, Effect Size
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Bennetts, Shannon K.; Love, Jasmine; Hackworth, Naomi J.; Mensah, Fiona K.; Westrupp, Elizabeth M.; Berthelsen, Donna; Levickis, Penny; Bennett, Clair; Nicholson, Jan M. – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2021
Participant attrition is a significant challenge for longitudinal studies, particularly those involving disadvantaged populations. We attempted to re-engage n = 990 families in a five-year follow-up of a randomised controlled trial of an early childhood parenting intervention. Tracing was attempted for n = 90/990 (9.1%) uncontactable participants.…
Descriptors: Attrition (Research Studies), Longitudinal Studies, Social Media, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Eisner, Nora L.; Murray, Aja L.; Eisner, Manuel; Ribeaud, Denis – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2019
Selective non-participation and attrition pose a ubiquitous threat to the validity of inferences drawn from observational longitudinal studies. We investigate various potential predictors for non-response and attrition of parents as well as young persons at different stages of a multi-informant study. Various phases of renewed consent from parents…
Descriptors: Attrition (Research Studies), Longitudinal Studies, Parents, Children
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Fahmy, Chantal; Clark, Kendra J.; Mitchell, Meghan M.; Decker, Scott H.; Pyrooz, David C. – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
After nearly four decades of growth, the number of people held in U.S. prisons has begun to decline. In an era of decarceration, social scientists need to understand prisoner reentry experiences. Longitudinal studies are one strategy to accomplish this goal. Yet, the retention of a formerly incarcerated population across waves of interviews is…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, Males
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Müller, Bettina; Castiglioni, Laura – Sociological Methods & Research, 2020
In the context of cross-sectional surveys, the scope of research on the impact of response enhancing strategies on sample composition and nonresponse bias is vast. This topic has rarely been addressed for panel studies, however, although these are becoming an increasingly important data source in social research. In this article, we evaluate the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Surveys, Dropouts, Longitudinal Studies
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Shen, Yaqi – Reading Psychology, 2023
Morphological awareness has been assessed longitudinally for monolinguals and bilinguals to trace the developmental trend. Researchers have found the important role it plays in literacy development including vocabulary growth and reading development. Conclusions about the important role morphological awareness play in literacy development are…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Metalinguistics, Chinese, Longitudinal Studies
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Veal, Britney; Sadeq, Nasreen A.; Atkinson, Taylor J.; Andel, Ross – Health Education & Behavior, 2023
Objectives: Volunteering promotes well-being and may provide added purpose to life after retirement. Limited evidence exists regarding the characteristics and study adherence among those who participate in longitudinal studies while also volunteering outside the study. We assessed characteristics and adherence of older adults who volunteered…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Well Being, Longitudinal Studies, Cognitive Ability
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