AbstractThis paper summarizes the discussions held during an in-depth six-hour workshop on the challenges of combining data from different survey modes with the anticipated aim of identifying current research needs. The main theme of the workshop was mixing survey modes as a way to meet the challenge of low response rates. However, the use of multi-mode surveys introduces new sources of bias: not all households have access to certain survey media (coverage bias); the response rate using one or another of the survey modes is correlated with social demographics (non-response bias); the sampling frame is dependent on the mode (sampling bias) or the instrument itself may affect the responses (measurement bias). The aim of this report is present...
"Falling response rates and the advancement of technology have shaped the discussion in survey metho...
As a consequence of declining response rates, rising costs, and growing telephone under-coverage, mi...
Surveys, or survey designs still represent the silver bullet in quantitative-oriented social science...
This paper reports on an expert workshop on mixed mode data collection comparative social surveys th...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The aim of the Mixed Modes an...
Survey-based data collection makes a fundamental contribution to social science research in Switzerl...
This paper reports on an expert workshop on mixed mode data collection comparative social surveys th...
This workshop will introduce participants to the characteristics of survey research design. It is pr...
This paper discusses the challenges in assessing the effects of mixed modes on measurement. We brief...
“Mixed-mode designs” are innovative types of surveys which combine more than one mode of administrat...
Background. Many studies in health sciences research rely on collecting participant-reported outcom...
We compare two alternative mixed mode survey designs with face-to-face data collection in terms of d...
This article describes a randomised experiment with mixed-mode survey designs in the context of a ho...
Surveys increasingly use mixed mode data collection (e.g., combining face-to-face and web) because t...
In an optimal design for mixed‐mode surveys, be it within a country or across countries, there are t...
"Falling response rates and the advancement of technology have shaped the discussion in survey metho...
As a consequence of declining response rates, rising costs, and growing telephone under-coverage, mi...
Surveys, or survey designs still represent the silver bullet in quantitative-oriented social science...
This paper reports on an expert workshop on mixed mode data collection comparative social surveys th...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The aim of the Mixed Modes an...
Survey-based data collection makes a fundamental contribution to social science research in Switzerl...
This paper reports on an expert workshop on mixed mode data collection comparative social surveys th...
This workshop will introduce participants to the characteristics of survey research design. It is pr...
This paper discusses the challenges in assessing the effects of mixed modes on measurement. We brief...
“Mixed-mode designs” are innovative types of surveys which combine more than one mode of administrat...
Background. Many studies in health sciences research rely on collecting participant-reported outcom...
We compare two alternative mixed mode survey designs with face-to-face data collection in terms of d...
This article describes a randomised experiment with mixed-mode survey designs in the context of a ho...
Surveys increasingly use mixed mode data collection (e.g., combining face-to-face and web) because t...
In an optimal design for mixed‐mode surveys, be it within a country or across countries, there are t...
"Falling response rates and the advancement of technology have shaped the discussion in survey metho...
As a consequence of declining response rates, rising costs, and growing telephone under-coverage, mi...
Surveys, or survey designs still represent the silver bullet in quantitative-oriented social science...