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Chapter 5: Exploring The Mind Of The Interviewer: Findings From Research With Interviewers To Improve The Survey Process Appendix 5, Robin Kaplan, Erica Yu
Chapter 5: Exploring The Mind Of The Interviewer: Findings From Research With Interviewers To Improve The Survey Process Appendix 5, Robin Kaplan, Erica Yu
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 5A Interview Protocol
Appendix 5B Vignettes
Chapter 9: Why Do Interviewers Vary In Achieving Interview Privacy And Does Privacy Matter? Appendix 9, Zeina N. Mneimneh, Julie A. De Jong, Yasmin A. Altwaijri
Chapter 9: Why Do Interviewers Vary In Achieving Interview Privacy And Does Privacy Matter? Appendix 9, Zeina N. Mneimneh, Julie A. De Jong, Yasmin A. Altwaijri
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 9A
Table A9A.1 Description and univariate distribution of measures used in models
Appendix 9B
Table A9B.1 Random Intercept Two Level Logistic Regression Model Predicting Third-party Presence during the Interview
Chapter 3: General Interviewing Techniques: Developing Evidence-Based Practices For Standardized Interviewing Appendix 3, Nora Cate Schaeffer, Jennifer Dykema, Steve M. Coombs, Rob K. Schultz, Lisa Holland, Margaret L. Hudson
Chapter 3: General Interviewing Techniques: Developing Evidence-Based Practices For Standardized Interviewing Appendix 3, Nora Cate Schaeffer, Jennifer Dykema, Steve M. Coombs, Rob K. Schultz, Lisa Holland, Margaret L. Hudson
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Table A3A.1 Summary of Basic Techniques of Standardized Interviewing (adapted from Fowler and Mangione 1990, pp. 35-53)
Table A3A.2 Basic Question Forms (Response Formats)
Chapter 4: How To Conduct Effective Interviewer Training: A Meta-Analysis And Systematic Review Appendix 4, Jessica Daikeler, Michael Bosnjak
Chapter 4: How To Conduct Effective Interviewer Training: A Meta-Analysis And Systematic Review Appendix 4, Jessica Daikeler, Michael Bosnjak
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 4A Appendix Table A4A.1: Overview of the literature on interviewer tasks addressed in interviewer training experiments
Appendix 4B The meta-analytical process
Appendix 4C Random effects model and meta regression summary statistics
Appendix 4D List of missing studies in the paper
References
Chapter 8: Examining The Utility Of Interviewer Observations On The Survey Response Process. Appendix 8, Brady T. West, Ting Yan, Frauke Kreuter, Michael Josten, Heather Schroeder
Chapter 8: Examining The Utility Of Interviewer Observations On The Survey Response Process. Appendix 8, Brady T. West, Ting Yan, Frauke Kreuter, Michael Josten, Heather Schroeder
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 8A Additional Evaluation of Derived NSFG Classes
Figure A8A.1
Figure A8A.2
Table A8A.1
Table A8A.2
Table A8A.3
Appendix 8B Additional Details on ESS Items
Chapter 7: Statistical Identification Of Fraudulent Interviews In Surveys: Improving Interviewer Controls Appendix 7, Silvia Schwanhäuser, Joseph W. Sakshaug, Yuliya Kosyakova, Frauke Kreuter
Chapter 7: Statistical Identification Of Fraudulent Interviews In Surveys: Improving Interviewer Controls Appendix 7, Silvia Schwanhäuser, Joseph W. Sakshaug, Yuliya Kosyakova, Frauke Kreuter
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Table A7A.1 Number of identical response patterns
Chapter 6: Behavior Change Techniques For Reducing Interviewer Contributions To Total Survey Error Appendix 6, Brad Edwards, Hanyu Sun, Ryan Hubbard
Chapter 6: Behavior Change Techniques For Reducing Interviewer Contributions To Total Survey Error Appendix 6, Brad Edwards, Hanyu Sun, Ryan Hubbard
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 6A Medical Expenditure Panel Survey key statistics for prescribed medicines for those 65 and older in the U.S.
Appendix 6B CAPI screenshots
Appendix 6C Westat’s CARI code screenshots
Appendix 6D Coding scheme
Appendix 6E Flowchart of CARI rapid feedback process
Appendix 6F Multilevel multinomial logistic regression models
Appendix 6G Multilevel multinomial logistic regression models with interviewer experience
Appendix 6H Alert frequency
Chapter 12: Differences In Interaction Quantity And Conversational Flow In Capi And Cati Interviews. Appendix 12, Yfke Ongena, Marieke Haan
Chapter 12: Differences In Interaction Quantity And Conversational Flow In Capi And Cati Interviews. Appendix 12, Yfke Ongena, Marieke Haan
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 12A Differences in Length of Interviewer-Respondent Interactions in CAPI and CATI Interviews
Table A12A.1 Response Rrates (AAPOR RR1)
Table A12A.2 Descriptive Statistics for Questions and Respondent Characteristics
Table A12A.3 Means and Correlations Trimmed number of Turns and Events in CAPI and CATI by Question Characteristics
Table A12A.4 Means and Correlations Trimmed number of Turns and Events by Question Characteristics
Chapter 11: Virtual Interviewers, Social Identities, And Survey Measurement Error. Appendix 11, Frederick Conrad, Michael Schober, Daniel Nielsen, Heidi Reichert
Chapter 11: Virtual Interviewers, Social Identities, And Survey Measurement Error. Appendix 11, Frederick Conrad, Michael Schober, Daniel Nielsen, Heidi Reichert
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Table A11A.1 Proportion of race-related items for which race of interviewer effects are observed across eleven published studies.
Table A11A.2 Virtual interviewer assignments and linked example videos, N=1,735
Table A11A.3. Debriefing questionnaire about respondents’ experience administered textually after the primary date were collected
Table A11A.4 Respondent – Virtual interviewer gender and race assignments, and match conditions N=1,735
Table A11A.5 Respondent characteristics, N=1,735
Table A11A.6 Questionnaire administered to respondents.
Table A11A.7 Respondent gender and race choices, N=1,735
Chapter 10: Unintended Interviewer Bias In A Community-Based Participatory Research Randomized Control Trial Among American Indian Youth Appendix 10, Patrick Habecker, Jerreed Ivanich
Chapter 10: Unintended Interviewer Bias In A Community-Based Participatory Research Randomized Control Trial Among American Indian Youth Appendix 10, Patrick Habecker, Jerreed Ivanich
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 10A Analysis of Internalizing and Externalizing Subscales
Table A10A.1: Linear Mixed-Effects Models Predicting Subscales of Internalizing Behavior
Table A10A.2: Linear Mixed-Effects Models Predicting Subscales of Externalizing Behavior
Chapter 18: Response Times As An Indicator Of Data Quality: Associations With Question, Interviewer, And Respondent Characteristics In A Health Survey Of Diverse Respondents. Appendix 18, Dana Garbarski, Jennifer Dykema, Nora Cate Schaeffer, Dorothy Farrar Edwards
Chapter 18: Response Times As An Indicator Of Data Quality: Associations With Question, Interviewer, And Respondent Characteristics In A Health Survey Of Diverse Respondents. Appendix 18, Dana Garbarski, Jennifer Dykema, Nora Cate Schaeffer, Dorothy Farrar Edwards
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 18A Description of individual question characteristics and hypotheses for their relationship with RTs
Appendix 18B Description of established tools for evaluating questions and hypotheses for their relationship with RTs
Appendix 18C Sample Description
Table 18.C1. Number of completed interviews by respondents’ race/ethnicity and sample
Appendix 18D Additional Tables
Appendix 18E References
Chapter 14: Explaining Interviewer Effects On Survey Unit Nonresponse: A Cross-Survey Analysis. Appendix 14, Daniela Ackermann-Piek, Julie M. Korbmacher, Ulrich Krieger
Chapter 14: Explaining Interviewer Effects On Survey Unit Nonresponse: A Cross-Survey Analysis. Appendix 14, Daniela Ackermann-Piek, Julie M. Korbmacher, Ulrich Krieger
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 14A Questionnaire for the Interviewer Survey
Table A14A.1 Original German Version and English Translation of the Questionnaire for the GIP 2012, PIAAC, GIP 2014, and SHARE Interviewer Surveys
Appendix 14A: Descriptive Statistics: The Interviewers of the GIP 2012, PIAAC, GIP 2014, and SHARE
Table A14B.1 Descriptive Statistics for Interviewer’s Socio-Demographic Characteristics, Work Experience, and Working Hours per Week, Separate by Survey
Table A14B.1 Cronbach´s Alpha for Indicators on Interviewer Characteristics, all Surveys Combined and Separate by Survey
Table A14B.2 Interviewer Survey: Factor Matrix for Items About Reasons for Working as an Interviewer, Including Variances
Table A14B.3 Interviewer Survey: Factor …
Chapter 13: Interacting With Interviewers In Text And Voice Interviews On Smartphones. Appendix 13, Michael F. Schober, Frederick G. Conrad, Christopher Antoun, Alison W. Bowers, Andrew L. Hupp, H. Yanna Yan
Chapter 13: Interacting With Interviewers In Text And Voice Interviews On Smartphones. Appendix 13, Michael F. Schober, Frederick G. Conrad, Christopher Antoun, Alison W. Bowers, Andrew L. Hupp, H. Yanna Yan
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix A: Example human text and voice interchange that includes clarification.
Appendix B: Coding Manual
Appendix A13C.1 (Data) attached below
Chapter 17: Exploring The Antecedents And Consequences Of Interviewer Reading Speed (Irs) At The Question Level. Appendix 17, Allyson L. Holbrook, Timothy P. Johnson, Evgenia Kapousouz, Young Ik Cho
Chapter 17: Exploring The Antecedents And Consequences Of Interviewer Reading Speed (Irs) At The Question Level. Appendix 17, Allyson L. Holbrook, Timothy P. Johnson, Evgenia Kapousouz, Young Ik Cho
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Figure A17.A.1: Manipulation of Question Characteristics (Example Questions Shown)
Figure A17.A.2: Response Latency Validity Options Provided to Interviewers after Each Question where Response Latencies were Measured
Figure A17.A.3: Interviewer Behavior Codes Used to Identify Question Latency Problems
Appendix 17.B: Measurement of Response and Question Latencies Table A17.B.1: Validity of Response Latency Measurement
Table A17.B.2: Validity of Question Latency Measurement
References
Appendix 17.C: Questions in CAPI Survey for which Response Latencies were Measured
Chapter 16: Investigating The Use Of Nurse Paradata In Understanding Nonresponse To Biological Data Collection. Appendix 16, Fiona Pashazadeh, Alexandru Cernat, Joseph W. Sakshaug
Chapter 16: Investigating The Use Of Nurse Paradata In Understanding Nonresponse To Biological Data Collection. Appendix 16, Fiona Pashazadeh, Alexandru Cernat, Joseph W. Sakshaug
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 16A: Descriptive statistics for available call records
Figure A16A.1 Histograms of wave 2 nurse visit call length by call status with outlier of 691 minutes removed from the ‘any interviewing done’ category
Figure A16A.2 Histograms of wave 3 nurse visit call length by call status with outlier of 464 minutes removed from the ‘any interviewing done’ category
Figure A16A.3 Bar chart of total number of calls per household at UKHLS wave 2 nurse visit
Figure A16A.4 Bar chart of total number of calls per household at UKHLS wave 3 nurse visit
Figure A16A.5 Histogram of total nurse visit time …
Chapter 22: A Comparison Of Different Approaches To Examining Whether Interviewer Effects Tend To Vary Across Different Subgroups Of Respondents. Appendix 22a, Geert Loosveldt, Celine Wuyts
Chapter 22: A Comparison Of Different Approaches To Examining Whether Interviewer Effects Tend To Vary Across Different Subgroups Of Respondents. Appendix 22a, Geert Loosveldt, Celine Wuyts
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Table A22A.1 Substantive Questions about Climate Change and Energy (Module D) and Welfare Attitudes (Module E) Included in the Analysis
Syntax
Chapter 21: Modeling Interviewer Effects In The National Health Interview Survey. Appendix 21, James Dahlhamer, Aaron Maitland, Benjamin Zablotsky, Carla Zelaya
Chapter 21: Modeling Interviewer Effects In The National Health Interview Survey. Appendix 21, James Dahlhamer, Aaron Maitland, Benjamin Zablotsky, Carla Zelaya
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Supplemental Table A21.1 Questions, Question Characteristics, and Intra-Interviewer Correlations (IIC)
Table A21.2 Descriptive Statistics for Respondent and Case Characteristics Included in Multi-Level Models
Table A21.3 Descriptive Statistics for County Measures Included in Multi-Level Models
Table A21.4 Descriptive Statistics for Interviewer Characteristics Included in Multi-Level Models
Table A21.5 Mock Dataset Structure Depicting Questions, Interviewer Groups, and IICs
Chapter 20: What Do Interviewers Learn? Changes In Interview Length And Interviewer Behaviors Over The Field Period. Appendix 20, Kristen M. Olson, Jolene Smyth
Chapter 20: What Do Interviewers Learn? Changes In Interview Length And Interviewer Behaviors Over The Field Period. Appendix 20, Kristen M. Olson, Jolene Smyth
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 20A Full Model Coefficients and Standard Errors Predicting Count of Questions with Individual Interviewer Behaviors, Two-level Multilevel Poisson Models with Number of Questions Asked as Exposure Variable, WLT1 and WLT2
Analytic strategyTable A20A.1 Coefficients and Standard Errors from Multilevel Poisson Regression Models Predicting Number of Questions with Exact Question Reading with Total Number of Questions Asked to Each Respondent as an Exposure Variable, WLT1 and WLT2
Table A20A.2 Coefficients and Standard Errors from Multilevel Poisson Regression Models Predicting Number of Questions with Nondirective Probes with Total Number of Questions Asked to Each Respondent as an Exposure Variable, WLT1 and …
Chapter 19: Accuracy And Utility Of Using Paradata To Detect Question-Reading Deviations. Appendix 19, Jennifer Kelley
Chapter 19: Accuracy And Utility Of Using Paradata To Detect Question-Reading Deviations. Appendix 19, Jennifer Kelley
Interviewer Workshop, 2019: Interviewers and Their Effects from a Total Survey Error Perspective
Appendix 19A
Minor Deviations
Question as it Appears in Questionnaire
Examples of Deviations*