An important theoretical question in survey research over the past fifty years has been: How does bringing in late or reluctant respondents affect total survey error? Does the effort and expense of obtaining interviews from difficult to contact or reluctant respondents significantly decrease the nonresponse error of survey estimates? Or do these late respondents introduce enough measurement error to offset any reductions in nonresponse bias? This dissertation attempted to address these questions by examining nonresponse and data quality in two national household surveys--the Current Population Survey (CPS) and the American Time Use Survey (ATUS). Response propensity models were first developed for each survey, and busyness and social c...
Data quality has long been a cornerstone of social science research: researchers are constantly and ...
Abstract Many surveys of the U.S. household population are experiencing higher refusal rates. Nonres...
Statistical examinations of deterministic and stochastic response propensity assert that a sample ca...
A common hypothesis about practices to reduce survey nonresponse is that those persons brought into ...
Abstract A common hypothesis about practices to reduce survey nonresponse is that those persons brou...
Survey data can reduce the risk of making poor public policies and business decisions. It is therefo...
This paper examines non-response in a large government survey. The response rate for the American Ti...
The decline in response rates in surveys of the general population is regarded by many researchers a...
Interviewer observations are an important source of auxiliary information in survey research. Interv...
Surveys are a tool to describe a pre-determined population in terms of socio-demographic characteris...
This dissertation focuses on understudied aspects of nonresponse in a context where limited informat...
Researchers world-wide are concerned about a decline in survey response rates. One consequence of su...
Abstract While nonresponse rates in household surveys are increasing in most industrialized nations,...
Survey methodologists worry about trade-offs between nonresponse and measurement error. Past finding...
Abstract This article examines nonresponse in a large government survey, the American Time Use Surve...
Data quality has long been a cornerstone of social science research: researchers are constantly and ...
Abstract Many surveys of the U.S. household population are experiencing higher refusal rates. Nonres...
Statistical examinations of deterministic and stochastic response propensity assert that a sample ca...
A common hypothesis about practices to reduce survey nonresponse is that those persons brought into ...
Abstract A common hypothesis about practices to reduce survey nonresponse is that those persons brou...
Survey data can reduce the risk of making poor public policies and business decisions. It is therefo...
This paper examines non-response in a large government survey. The response rate for the American Ti...
The decline in response rates in surveys of the general population is regarded by many researchers a...
Interviewer observations are an important source of auxiliary information in survey research. Interv...
Surveys are a tool to describe a pre-determined population in terms of socio-demographic characteris...
This dissertation focuses on understudied aspects of nonresponse in a context where limited informat...
Researchers world-wide are concerned about a decline in survey response rates. One consequence of su...
Abstract While nonresponse rates in household surveys are increasing in most industrialized nations,...
Survey methodologists worry about trade-offs between nonresponse and measurement error. Past finding...
Abstract This article examines nonresponse in a large government survey, the American Time Use Surve...
Data quality has long been a cornerstone of social science research: researchers are constantly and ...
Abstract Many surveys of the U.S. household population are experiencing higher refusal rates. Nonres...
Statistical examinations of deterministic and stochastic response propensity assert that a sample ca...