Surveys often contain sensitive questions, that is, questions about private, illegal, or socially undesirable behavior. When asked directly in standard survey modes, respondents tend to underreport these behaviors, yielding biased results. One method that promises more valid estimates than direct questioning (DQ) is the item count technique (ICT). In this paper, methodological benefits and disadvantages of the ICT, as compared to DQ, are empirically evaluated with regard to questions on self-reported delinquency. We present findings from a face-to-face survey of 552 respondents who had been convicted under criminal law prior to the survey. The results show that, first, subjective measures of survey quality such as trust in anonymity or will...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Social desirability bias is a problem in surveys collecting data on sensitive or private topics (e.g...
Surveys often contain sensitive questions, that is, questions about private, illegal, or socially un...
"Surveys often contain sensitive questions, that is, questions about private, illegal, or socially u...
Surveys often contain sensitive questions, i. e., questions about private, illegal, or socially unde...
The item count method is a way of asking sensitive survey questions which protects the anonymity of ...
Information such as the prevalence and frequency of criminal behaviour is difficult to estimate usin...
This paper presents empirical evidence on a recent advancement of the item count technique (ICT, a s...
This article is an empirical contribution to the evaluation of the randomized response technique (RR...
"Self-administered online surveys may provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents th...
Self-administered online surveys may provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents tha...
Self-report delinquency (SRD) surveys have begun to be used more than 70 years ago to measure delinq...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
Misreporting of sensitive characteristics in surveys is a major concern among survey methodologists ...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Social desirability bias is a problem in surveys collecting data on sensitive or private topics (e.g...
Surveys often contain sensitive questions, that is, questions about private, illegal, or socially un...
"Surveys often contain sensitive questions, that is, questions about private, illegal, or socially u...
Surveys often contain sensitive questions, i. e., questions about private, illegal, or socially unde...
The item count method is a way of asking sensitive survey questions which protects the anonymity of ...
Information such as the prevalence and frequency of criminal behaviour is difficult to estimate usin...
This paper presents empirical evidence on a recent advancement of the item count technique (ICT, a s...
This article is an empirical contribution to the evaluation of the randomized response technique (RR...
"Self-administered online surveys may provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents th...
Self-administered online surveys may provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents tha...
Self-report delinquency (SRD) surveys have begun to be used more than 70 years ago to measure delinq...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
Misreporting of sensitive characteristics in surveys is a major concern among survey methodologists ...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Social desirability bias is a problem in surveys collecting data on sensitive or private topics (e.g...