rapid growth in the prevalence and use of cell phones, raise concerns about undercoverage error in random digit dial (RDD) telephone samples. A supplement to the Current Population Survey (CPS) was conducted in 2004 to examine telephone service and usage in U.S. households. This article explores the potential for biases in RDD surveys resulting from the increases in cell phones by presenting estimates of the percentage of households with different types of telephone service, including the percentage of cell-only households, and giving demographic profiles of households by type of telephone service. Logistic regression models examine variables that predict whether households are without a telephone or only have cell phones. These predictors ...
The rise of cell-only households (those in which a cell phone is the household’s only telephone serv...
Abstract Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone sam-ples due to cell phone only househol...
Understanding the evolving role of cell phones in how people communicate every day is one of the fun...
rapid growth in the prevalence and use of cell phones, raise concerns about undercoverage error in r...
Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone samples due to cell phone–only households (i.e., ...
Absbact Nontelephone households are implicitly treated as a static population in discussions of samp...
Abstract We conducted a dual frame survey of landline and cell phone numbers in 2004 to evaluate the...
Abstract Historically, the coverage bias from excluding the United States cell-only population from ...
Abstract Accurately assessing the number of household phone lines in random-digit dialed (RDD) surve...
Cell phone use has consistently risen over recent years; “cord-cutters ” may be the biggest threat t...
In addition to ongoing concerns about RDD sampling frames, the increasing use of wireless or cellula...
Abstract The high costs and largely unknown error properties of cellular telephone interviews make s...
The usefulness of landline random digit dialing (RDD) in epidemiologic studies is threatened by the ...
Abstract By the late 1970s, household telephone coverage grew to exceed 90 percent in the United Sta...
The usefulness of landline random digit dialing (RDD) in epidemiologic studies is threatened by the ...
The rise of cell-only households (those in which a cell phone is the household’s only telephone serv...
Abstract Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone sam-ples due to cell phone only househol...
Understanding the evolving role of cell phones in how people communicate every day is one of the fun...
rapid growth in the prevalence and use of cell phones, raise concerns about undercoverage error in r...
Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone samples due to cell phone–only households (i.e., ...
Absbact Nontelephone households are implicitly treated as a static population in discussions of samp...
Abstract We conducted a dual frame survey of landline and cell phone numbers in 2004 to evaluate the...
Abstract Historically, the coverage bias from excluding the United States cell-only population from ...
Abstract Accurately assessing the number of household phone lines in random-digit dialed (RDD) surve...
Cell phone use has consistently risen over recent years; “cord-cutters ” may be the biggest threat t...
In addition to ongoing concerns about RDD sampling frames, the increasing use of wireless or cellula...
Abstract The high costs and largely unknown error properties of cellular telephone interviews make s...
The usefulness of landline random digit dialing (RDD) in epidemiologic studies is threatened by the ...
Abstract By the late 1970s, household telephone coverage grew to exceed 90 percent in the United Sta...
The usefulness of landline random digit dialing (RDD) in epidemiologic studies is threatened by the ...
The rise of cell-only households (those in which a cell phone is the household’s only telephone serv...
Abstract Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone sam-ples due to cell phone only househol...
Understanding the evolving role of cell phones in how people communicate every day is one of the fun...