Updates an analysis of the complexity of including cell phone samples in surveys and issues of non-coverage bias. Examines weighted estimates from landline, cell, and combined samples; demographic and other characteristics of each group; and implications
Looks at whether adding cell phone interviews to surveys about Americans' use of and attitudes towar...
Abstract The high costs and largely unknown error properties of cellular telephone interviews make s...
The growing number of mobile-only households across Europe and in Northern America is at present one...
Presents findings from a survey that examines differences in the age, sex, race, and education of ce...
Assesses the cost, sample composition, weighting, and substantive effect on survey results involved ...
The rise of cell-only households (those in which a cell phone is the household’s only telephone serv...
Explores the implications of conducting surveys by both landline and cell phones for issues of surve...
Abstract Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone sam-ples due to cell phone only househol...
Abstract By the late 1970s, household telephone coverage grew to exceed 90 percent in the United Sta...
Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone samples due to cell phone–only households (i.e., ...
Abstract We conducted a dual frame survey of landline and cell phone numbers in 2004 to evaluate the...
Understanding the evolving role of cell phones in how people communicate every day is one of the fun...
The number of cell-phone-only households has continued to grow – 12.8 % of all households by the end...
Telephone surveying has become the major mode of data collection in the sample survey field since th...
Explains how the increase in cell phone-only households results in inefficiencies and demographicall...
Looks at whether adding cell phone interviews to surveys about Americans' use of and attitudes towar...
Abstract The high costs and largely unknown error properties of cellular telephone interviews make s...
The growing number of mobile-only households across Europe and in Northern America is at present one...
Presents findings from a survey that examines differences in the age, sex, race, and education of ce...
Assesses the cost, sample composition, weighting, and substantive effect on survey results involved ...
The rise of cell-only households (those in which a cell phone is the household’s only telephone serv...
Explores the implications of conducting surveys by both landline and cell phones for issues of surve...
Abstract Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone sam-ples due to cell phone only househol...
Abstract By the late 1970s, household telephone coverage grew to exceed 90 percent in the United Sta...
Noncoverage rates in U.S. landline-based telephone samples due to cell phone–only households (i.e., ...
Abstract We conducted a dual frame survey of landline and cell phone numbers in 2004 to evaluate the...
Understanding the evolving role of cell phones in how people communicate every day is one of the fun...
The number of cell-phone-only households has continued to grow – 12.8 % of all households by the end...
Telephone surveying has become the major mode of data collection in the sample survey field since th...
Explains how the increase in cell phone-only households results in inefficiencies and demographicall...
Looks at whether adding cell phone interviews to surveys about Americans' use of and attitudes towar...
Abstract The high costs and largely unknown error properties of cellular telephone interviews make s...
The growing number of mobile-only households across Europe and in Northern America is at present one...