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Leon, Carmen M.; Aizpurua, Eva; van der Valk, Sophie – Field Methods, 2022
Previous research shows that the direction of rating scales can influence participants' response behavior. Studies also suggest that the device used to complete online surveys might affect the susceptibility to these effects due to the different question layouts (e.g., horizontal grids vs. vertical individual questions). This article contributes…
Descriptors: Online Surveys, Comparative Analysis, Questionnaires, Foreign Countries
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Hyder, Sanaa; Bilal, Lisa; Mneimneh, Zeina; Naseem, Mohammad Talal; DeVol, Edward; Aradati, Maggie; Shahab, Mona; BinMuammar, Abdulrahman; Al-Subaie, Abdullah; Al-Habeeb, AbdulHameed; Altwaijri, Yasmin – Field Methods, 2021
Previous studies suggest that refusals form the largest proportion of nonresponse for household surveys. As face-to-face household health surveys are uncommon in several countries, it might be advantageous for prospective surveys to preemptively tackle respondents' refusal to survey participation. Using contact history data from the Saudi National…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Response Rates (Questionnaires), Mental Health, Foreign Countries
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Greenleaf, Abigail R.; Turke, Shani R.; Bazié, Fiacre; Sawadogo, Nathalie; Guiella, Georges; Moreau, Caroline – Field Methods, 2021
A growing body of literature in low- and middle-income countries is challenging the long-held assumption that the respondent and interviewer should be strangers. We conducted a qualitative study in Burkina Faso comprised of in-depth interviews and focus group discussions to explore interviewers' experiences of collecting data on sexual and…
Descriptors: Interviews, Familiarity, Foreign Countries, Developing Nations
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Davis, Rachel E.; Lee, Sunghee; Johnson, Timothy P.; Conrad, Frederick; Resnicow, Ken; Thrasher, James F.; Mesa, Anna; Peterson, Karen E. – Field Methods, 2020
Acquiescence is often defined as the systematic selection of agreeable ("strongly agree") or affirmative ("yes") responses to survey items, regardless of item content or directionality. This definition implies that acquiescence is immune to item characteristics; however, the influence of item characteristics on acquiescence…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Telephone Surveys, Whites, Item Analysis
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Lipps, Oliver – Field Methods, 2019
Specific interviewer characteristics, interviewer continuity, or matching interviewer and household characteristics may increase cooperation, especially for difficult-to-convince households. In face-to-face surveys, unobserved heterogeneity often makes a proper analysis of interviewer effects impossible. Although surveys conducted in telephone…
Descriptors: Interviews, Telephone Surveys, Cooperation, Participant Characteristics
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Cernat, Alexandru; Lynn, Peter – Field Methods, 2018
This article is concerned with the extent to which the propensity to participate in a web face-to-face sequential mixed-mode survey is influenced by the ability to communicate with sample members by e-mail in addition to mail. Researchers may be able to collect e-mail addresses for sample members and to use them subsequently to send survey…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Electronic Mail, Response Rates (Questionnaires), Mass Media Role
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Sikkens, Elga; van San, Marion; Sieckelinck, Stijn; Boeije, Hennie; de Winter, Micha – Field Methods, 2017
Social media are useful facilitators when recruiting hidden populations for research. In our research on youth and radicalization, we were able to find and contact young people with extreme ideals through Facebook. In this article, we discuss our experiences using Facebook as a tool for finding respondents who do not trust researchers. Facebook…
Descriptors: Social Media, Qualitative Research, Participant Characteristics, Recruitment
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Guest, Greg; Namey, Emily; McKenna, Kevin – Field Methods, 2017
Few empirical studies exist to guide researchers in determining the number of focus groups necessary for a research study. The analyses described here provide foundational evidence to help researchers in this regard. We conducted a thematic analysis of 40 focus groups on health-seeking behaviors of African American men in Durham, North Carolina.…
Descriptors: Focus Groups, Sample Size, Evidence Based Practice, Thematic Approach
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Kelly, Bridget; Margolis, Marjorie; McCormack, Lauren; LeBaron, Patricia A.; Chowdhury, Dhuly – Field Methods, 2017
The literature on factors that influence participation in qualitative research is lacking. We conducted an experiment with a nationally representative sample to test the impact of different incentive types and amounts on willingness to participate in a hypothetical qualitative interview. We randomized participants from an online panel to one of…
Descriptors: Participant Characteristics, Qualitative Research, Incentives, Comparative Analysis
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Antoun, Christopher; Zhang, Chan; Conrad, Frederick G.; Schober, Michael F. – Field Methods, 2016
The rise of social media websites (e.g., Facebook) and online services such as Google AdWords and Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) offers new opportunities for researchers to recruit study participants. Although researchers have started to use these emerging methods, little is known about how they perform in terms of cost efficiency and, more…
Descriptors: Social Media, Web Sites, Recruitment, Users (Information)
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Moosa, Sheena; Koopman-Boyden, Peggy – Field Methods, 2016
Representing isolated small island communities through social survey research continues to be challenging. We examine a locally developed method to reach and recruit older people (65+ years) for a survey on well-being in the small island developing state of Maldives. The use of messengers to recruit participants is examined in the context of these…
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Social Science Research, Recruitment, Participant Characteristics
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West, Brady T.; Kreuter, Frauke – Field Methods, 2015
Face-to-face household surveys sometimes ask field interviewers to record observations about selected characteristics of all sampled housing units. Some surveys ask interviewers to record judgments about potential respondents to serve as proxy measures of key variables. Past studies have shown that these judgments are prone to error, which has…
Descriptors: Interviews, Participant Characteristics, Accuracy, Observation