This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in face-to-face household interview surveys. We consider this question for 541 survey variables, drawn from six major face-to-face UK surveys that have different sample designs, cover different topic areas, and achieve response rates between 54 and 76 percent. Using a multilevel meta-analytic framework, we estimate for each survey variable the expected difference between the point estimate for a proportion at call n and for the full achieved sample. Results show that most variables are surprisingly close to the final achieved sample distribution after only one or two call attempts and before any post-stratification weighting has been applied; t...
The aim of this article is to examine whether providing pollsters with multiple opportunities to car...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...
We assess how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in face-to-f...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
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- ...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
© European Survey Research Association. This study investigates the link between the effort undertak...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...
This study investigates the link between the effort undertaken to collect survey data and the non-re...
"This study investigates the link between the effort undertaken to collect survey data and the nonre...
"The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate...
"This study investigates the link between the effort undertaken to collect survey data and the nonre...
"The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate...
The aim of this article is to examine whether providing pollsters with multiple opportunities to car...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...
We assess how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in face-to-f...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
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- ...
This study assesses how survey outcome distributions change over repeated calls made to addresses in...
© European Survey Research Association. This study investigates the link between the effort undertak...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...
This study investigates the link between the effort undertaken to collect survey data and the non-re...
"This study investigates the link between the effort undertaken to collect survey data and the nonre...
"The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate...
"This study investigates the link between the effort undertaken to collect survey data and the nonre...
"The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate...
The aim of this article is to examine whether providing pollsters with multiple opportunities to car...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...
The pursuit of high response rates to minimise the threat of nonresponse bias continues to dominate ...