Interest in a multimode approach to surveys has grown substantially in recent years, in part due to increased costs of face-to-face (FtF) interviewing and the emergence of the Internet as a survey mode. Yet, there is little systematic evidence of the impact of a multimode approach on survey costs and errors. This article reports the results of an experiment designed to evaluate whether a mixed-mode approach to a large screening survey would produce comparable response rates at a lower cost than an FtF screening effort. The experiment was carried out in the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), an ongoing panel study of Americans over age 50. In 2010, HRS conducted a household screening survey to recruit new sample members to supplement the exi...
This article shows how the use of multiple methods of follow-up can enhance the rate of response to ...
We examine the quality of two probability based polls, one interviewer administered (telephone) and ...
"Survey researchers increasingly use mixed-mode surveys for general population data collection becau...
This article describes a randomised experiment with mixed-mode survey designs in the context of a ho...
BACKGROUND: Many population health surveys consist of a mixed-mode design that includes a face-to-fa...
As a consequence of declining response rates, rising costs, and growing telephone under-coverage, mi...
Background: Population-based surveys currently face the problem of decreasing response rates. Mix...
This article reviews recent trends in modes of conducting surveys and presents results from a series...
"There are considerable cost and timeliness advantages associated with web interviewing, compared to...
"Conducting survey interviews on the internet has become an attractive method for lowering data coll...
Sequential mixed-mode designs are increasingly considered as an alternative to interviewer-administe...
Surveys increasingly use mixed mode data collection (e.g., combining face-to-face and web) because t...
Technological advances and increasing access to telephone and the internet mean that it is now possi...
In survey research it is important to have a good representation of the population. However, it appe...
Surveys, or survey designs still represent the silver bullet in quantitative-oriented social science...
This article shows how the use of multiple methods of follow-up can enhance the rate of response to ...
We examine the quality of two probability based polls, one interviewer administered (telephone) and ...
"Survey researchers increasingly use mixed-mode surveys for general population data collection becau...
This article describes a randomised experiment with mixed-mode survey designs in the context of a ho...
BACKGROUND: Many population health surveys consist of a mixed-mode design that includes a face-to-fa...
As a consequence of declining response rates, rising costs, and growing telephone under-coverage, mi...
Background: Population-based surveys currently face the problem of decreasing response rates. Mix...
This article reviews recent trends in modes of conducting surveys and presents results from a series...
"There are considerable cost and timeliness advantages associated with web interviewing, compared to...
"Conducting survey interviews on the internet has become an attractive method for lowering data coll...
Sequential mixed-mode designs are increasingly considered as an alternative to interviewer-administe...
Surveys increasingly use mixed mode data collection (e.g., combining face-to-face and web) because t...
Technological advances and increasing access to telephone and the internet mean that it is now possi...
In survey research it is important to have a good representation of the population. However, it appe...
Surveys, or survey designs still represent the silver bullet in quantitative-oriented social science...
This article shows how the use of multiple methods of follow-up can enhance the rate of response to ...
We examine the quality of two probability based polls, one interviewer administered (telephone) and ...
"Survey researchers increasingly use mixed-mode surveys for general population data collection becau...