Gaining valid answers to so-called sensitive questions is an age-old problem in survey research. Various techniques have been developed to guarantee anonymity and minimize the respondent’s feelings of jeopardy. Two such techniques are the randomized response technique (RRT) and the unmatched count technique (UCT). In this study the authors evaluate the effectiveness of different implementations of the RRT (using a forced-response design) in a computer-assisted setting and also compare the use of the RRT to that of the UCT. The techniques are evaluated according to various quality criteria, such as the prevalence estimates they provide, the ease of their use, and respondent trust in the techniques. The results indicate that the RRTs are prob...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Randomized response and item count techniques have originally been designed as statistical methods t...
The estimation of the relative size of a certain subgroup within a population under study is one of ...
Gaining valid answers to so-called sensitive questions is an age-old problem in survey research. Var...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
In this article, ‘‘Benford’s law’ ’ is applied to the ‘‘randomized response tech-nique’ ’ (RRT) to i...
"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...
Randomized response techniques (RRT) are well-known as tools to procure trustworthy survey data on c...
One way to protect an interviewee’s privacy when responding to a sensitive questions is through the ...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
[[abstract]]Randomized response techniques are useful for promoting respondent cooperation and reduc...
In social science research, survey respondents hesitate to answer sensitive questions. This explains...
In survey research it is often problematic to ask people sensitive questions because they may refuse...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Randomized response and item count techniques have originally been designed as statistical methods t...
The estimation of the relative size of a certain subgroup within a population under study is one of ...
Gaining valid answers to so-called sensitive questions is an age-old problem in survey research. Var...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
In this article, ‘‘Benford’s law’ ’ is applied to the ‘‘randomized response tech-nique’ ’ (RRT) to i...
"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...
Randomized response techniques (RRT) are well-known as tools to procure trustworthy survey data on c...
One way to protect an interviewee’s privacy when responding to a sensitive questions is through the ...
Self-administered online surveys provide a higher level of privacy protection to respondents than su...
[[abstract]]Randomized response techniques are useful for promoting respondent cooperation and reduc...
In social science research, survey respondents hesitate to answer sensitive questions. This explains...
In survey research it is often problematic to ask people sensitive questions because they may refuse...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Social desirability and the fear of sanctions can deter survey respondents from responding truthfull...
Randomized response and item count techniques have originally been designed as statistical methods t...
The estimation of the relative size of a certain subgroup within a population under study is one of ...