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Showing 1 to 15 of 73 results Save | Export
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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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Paula Clasing-Manquian; John Gonzalez – Field Methods, 2025
Web surveys are popular in social sciences for reaching a large audience at a low cost and in a short period. However, response rates and nonresponse bias are still issues of concern. Using a factorial randomized control trial design, this study explores whether different communication emails affect response rates, representativeness, and response…
Descriptors: Online Surveys, Doctoral Students, Intervention, Response Rates (Questionnaires)
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Francisco Olivos; Minhui Liu – Field Methods, 2025
The rapid advancements in generative artificial intelligence have opened new avenues for enhancing various aspects of research, including the design and evaluation of survey questionnaires. However, the recent pioneering applications have not considered questionnaire pretesting. This article explores the use of GPT models as a useful tool for…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Questionnaires, Test Construction, Pretesting
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Jessica Daikeler; Joss Roßmann; David Bretschi; Tobias Gummer; Henning Silber – Field Methods, 2025
Mostly in web surveys, attention checks have been proposed to identify inattentive respondents in self-administered surveys as previous research has argued that low-quality answers may introduce severe biases in data analyses. The increasing popularity of mixing survey modes for conducting probability-based surveys amplifies the need for…
Descriptors: Online Surveys, Mail Surveys, Attention, Response Style (Tests)
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Hafsteinn Einarsson – Field Methods, 2025
Survey organizations aiming to improve response rates in the later stages of fieldwork often attempt refusal conversions. However, reestablishing contact with units that have refused participation at prior stages of fieldwork may prove costly and time consuming. In this article, the potential of using a refusal conversion procedure in a single…
Descriptors: Surveys, Response Rates (Questionnaires), Young Adults, Methods
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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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Lipps, Oliver; Monsch, Gian-Andrea – Field Methods, 2022
Telephone surveys face more and more criticism because of decreasing coverage and increasing costs, and the risk of producing socially desirable answers. Consequently, survey administrators consider switching their surveys to the web mode, although the web mode is more susceptible to item nonresponse. Still, we do not know whether this is true for…
Descriptors: Telephone Surveys, Online Surveys, Questioning Techniques, Difficulty Level
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Powell, Teresa M.; Geronimo-Hara, Toni Rose; Tobin, Laura E.; Donoho, Carrie J.; Sheppard, Beverly D.; Walstrom, Jennifer L.; Rull, Rudolph P.; Faix, Dennis J. – Field Methods, 2023
Declining survey response rates concern researchers aiming to ensure study validity. This article tested the effectiveness of multiple pre-incentives on increasing survey response to the Millennium Cohort Study. Participants consisted of U.S. military service members and veterans, and were randomly assigned to receive a $2 bill, $5 gift card,…
Descriptors: Military Personnel, Response Rates (Questionnaires), Surveys, Incentives
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Chan Zhang; Shuaiying Cao; Minglei Wang; Jiangyan Wang; Lirui He – Field Methods, 2025
Previous research on grid questions has mostly focused on their comparability with the item-by-item method and the use of shading to help respondents navigate through a grid. This study extends prior work by examining whether lexical similarity among grid items affects how respondents answer the questions in an experiment where we manipulated…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Surveys, Test Construction, Design
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Hernandez, Nestor; Olson, Kristen; Smyth, Jolene D. – Field Methods, 2023
Questionnaire designers are encouraged to write questions as complete sentences. In self-administered surveys, incomplete question stems may reduce visual clutter but may also increase burden when respondents need to scan the response options to fully complete the question. We experimentally examine the effects of three categories of incomplete…
Descriptors: Surveys, Questionnaires, Test Construction, Reaction Time
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Foucault Welles, Brooke; Sun, Hanyu; Miller, Peter V. – Field Methods, 2022
We examine relationships between interviewers' nonverbal behaviors and adequate responding in face-to-face survey interviews. We videotaped professional interviewers administering face-to-face survey interviews and coded them for three interviewer nonverbal behaviors: smiling, nodding, and direct gaze. These nonverbal interviewer behaviors were…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Surveys, Interviews, Responses
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Cornelia E. Neuert – Field Methods, 2025
Using masculine forms in surveys is still common practice, with researchers presumably assuming they operate in a generic way. However, the generic masculine has been found to lead to male-biased representations in various contexts. This article studies the effects of alternative gendered linguistic forms in surveys. The language forms are…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Surveys, Response Style (Tests), Gender Bias
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Tanja Kunz; Simon Börlin; Tobias Gummer – Field Methods, 2025
This study examined the feasibility of conducting a follow-up survey of panel attriters as a panel maintenance measure to investigate respondents' reasons for attrition, assessing their willingness to rejoin, and updating their addresses. We surveyed FReDA panelists who had not participated in two consecutive subwaves and were excluded from the…
Descriptors: Feasibility Studies, Attrition (Research Studies), Research Problems, Response Rates (Questionnaires)
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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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Sun, Hanyu; Caporaso, Andrew; Cantor, David; Davis, Terisa; Blake, Kelly – Field Methods, 2023
Previous survey research has found that prompt interventions for speeding and straightlining were effective at reducing these undesirable response behaviors in web surveys. However, the effects of prompt interventions on data quality measures are mixed, and it is unclear how prompt interventions affect key survey estimates. We conducted an…
Descriptors: Prompting, Intervention, Online Surveys, Response Rates (Questionnaires)
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