A complete and comprehensive collaboration providing insight on future approaches to telephone survey methodology Over the past fifteen years, advances in technology have transformed the field of survey methodology, from how interviews are conducted to the management and analysis of compiled data. Advances in Telephone Survey Methodology is an allencompassing and authoritative resource that presents a theoretical, methodological, and statistical treatment of current practices while also establishing a discussion on how stateoftheart developments in telecommunications have and will continue to revolutionize the telephone survey process.
Seventyfive prominent international researchers and practitioners from government, academic, and private sectors have collaborated on this pioneering volume to discuss basic survey techniques and introduce the future directions of the telephone survey. Concepts and findings are organized in four partssampling and estimation, data collection, operations, and nonresponseequipping the reader with the needed practical applications to approach issues such as choice of target population, sample design, questionnaire construction, interviewing training, and measurement error. The book also introduces important topics that have been overlooked in previous literature, including:
The impact of mobile telephones on telephone surveys and the rising presence of mobileonly households worldwide
The design and construction of questionnaires using Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) software
The emerging use of wireless communication and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) versus the telephone
Methods for measuring and improving interviewer performance and productivity
Privacy, confidentiality, and respondent burden as main factors in telephone survey nonresponse
Procedures for the adjustment of nonresponse in telephone surveys
Indepth reviews of the literature presented along with a full bibliography, assembled from references throughout the world
Advances in Telephone Survey Methodology is an indispensable reference for survey researchers and practitioners in almost any discipline involving research methods such as sociology, social psychology, survey methodology, and statistics. This book also serves as an excellent text for courses and seminars on survey methods at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
Contributors |
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xi | |
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PART I PERSPECTIVES ON TELEPHONE SURVEY METHODOLOGY |
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Telephone Survey Methods: Adapting to Change |
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3 | (26) |
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PART II SAMPLING AND ESTIMATION |
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Sampling and Weighting in Household Telephone Surveys |
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29 | (27) |
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Recent Trends in Household Telephone Coverage in the United States |
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56 | (31) |
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The Influence of Mobile Telephones on Telephone Surveys |
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87 | (26) |
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Methods for Sampling Rare Populations in Telephone Surveys |
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113 | (20) |
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Multiplicity-Based Sampling for the Mobile Telephone Population: Coverage, Nonresponse, and Measurement Issues |
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133 | (16) |
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Multiple Mode and Frame Telephone Surveys |
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149 | (21) |
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Weighting Telephone Samples Using Propensity Scores |
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170 | (17) |
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Interviewer Error and Interviewer Burden |
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187 | (25) |
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Cues of Communication Difficulty in Telephone Interviews |
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212 | (19) |
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Oral Translation in Telephone Surveys |
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231 | (19) |
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The Effects of Mode and Format on Answers to Scalar Questions in Telephone and Web Surveys |
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250 | (26) |
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Visual Elements of Questionnaire Design: Experiments with a CATI Establishment Survey |
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276 | (21) |
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Mode Effects in the Canadian Community Health Survey: A Comparison of CATI and CAPI |
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297 | (20) |
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Establishing a New Survey Research Call Center |
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317 | (23) |
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CATI Sample Management Systems |
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340 | (19) |
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Measuring and Improving Telephone Interviewer Performance and Productivity |
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359 | (26) |
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Telephone Interviewer Voice Characteristics and the Survey Participation Decision |
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385 | (16) |
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Monitoring Telephone Interviewer Performance |
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401 | (22) |
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Accommodating New Technologies: Mobile and VoIP Communication |
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423 | (26) |
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Privacy, Confidentiality, and Respondent Burden as Factors in Telephone Survey Nonresponse |
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449 | (22) |
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The Use of Monetary Incentives to Reduce Nonresponse in Random Digit Dial Telephone Surveys |
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471 | (28) |
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The Causes and Consequences of Response Rates in Surveys by the News Media and Government Contractor Survey Research Firms |
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499 | (30) |
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Response Rates: How have they Changed and Where are they Headed? |
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529 | (32) |
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Aspects of Nonresponse Bias in RDD Telephone Surveys |
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561 | (26) |
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Evaluating and Modeling Early Cooperator Effects in RDD Surveys |
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587 | (32) |
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References |
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619 | (60) |
Index |
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679 | |
JAMES M. LEPKOWSKI, PhD, is Professor of Biostatistics and Research Professor at the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan. CLYDE TUCKER, PhD, is Senior Survey Methodologist at the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics in Washington, D.C.
J. MICHAEL BRICK, PhD, is Director of the Survey Methods Unit at Westat, Inc., in Rockville, Maryland.
EDITH D. de LEEUW, PhD, is Associate Professor in the Department of Methodology and Statistics at Utrecht University in the Netherlands.
LILLI JAPEC, PhD, is Senior Statistician at Statistics Sweden.
PAUL J. LAVRAKAS, PhD, is Vice President and Senior Research Methodologist at Nielsen Media Research in New York, New York.
MICHAEL W. LINK, PhD, is Senior Survey Methodologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia.
ROBERTA L. SANGSTER, PhD, is Research Statistician at the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics in Washington, D.C.