In this article, we investigate the relationship between interviewer travel behavior and field outcomes, such as contact rates, response rates, and contact attempts in two studies, the National Survey of Family Growth and the Health and Retirement Study. Using call record paradata that have been aggregated to interviewer-day levels, we examine two important cost drivers as measures of interviewer travel behavior: the distance that interviewers travel to segments and the number of segments visited on an interviewer-day. We explore several predictors of these measures of travel – the geographic size of the sampled areas, measures of urbanicity, and other sample and interviewer characteristics. We also explore the relationship between travel a...
The concept of “interviewer burden” suggests that if interviewers experience their tasks as more bur...
Interviewer-administered surveys are a primary method of collecting information from populations acr...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
In this article, we investigate the relationship between interviewer travel behavior and field outco...
Establishing contact is an important part of the response process and effective interviewer calling ...
Surveys are a tool to describe a pre-determined population in terms of socio-demographic characteris...
This thesis describes how paradata (like process data and interviewer observations) and other auxili...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
It is well established that interviewers learn behaviors both during training and on the job. How th...
Research shows that survey interviewers strongly influence the duration and speed of face-to-face in...
Traditional statistical analyses of interviewer effects on survey data do not examine whether these ...
Data on people’s travel behaviour is typically collected using travel questionnaires, travel diaries...
Declining survey response rates have increased the costs of travel survey recruitment. Recruiting re...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
We assess how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in face-to-f...
The concept of “interviewer burden” suggests that if interviewers experience their tasks as more bur...
Interviewer-administered surveys are a primary method of collecting information from populations acr...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
In this article, we investigate the relationship between interviewer travel behavior and field outco...
Establishing contact is an important part of the response process and effective interviewer calling ...
Surveys are a tool to describe a pre-determined population in terms of socio-demographic characteris...
This thesis describes how paradata (like process data and interviewer observations) and other auxili...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
It is well established that interviewers learn behaviors both during training and on the job. How th...
Research shows that survey interviewers strongly influence the duration and speed of face-to-face in...
Traditional statistical analyses of interviewer effects on survey data do not examine whether these ...
Data on people’s travel behaviour is typically collected using travel questionnaires, travel diaries...
Declining survey response rates have increased the costs of travel survey recruitment. Recruiting re...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
We assess how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in face-to-f...
The concept of “interviewer burden” suggests that if interviewers experience their tasks as more bur...
Interviewer-administered surveys are a primary method of collecting information from populations acr...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...