Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose Surveys

Recently, survey methodology literature has put forward responsive and adaptive survey designs as means to make efficient tradeoffs between survey quality and survey costs. The designs, however, restrict quality-cost assessments to nonresponse error, while there are various design features that impa...

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Main Authors: Melania Calinescu, Barry Schouten
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Survey Research Association 2016-04-01
Series:Survey Research Methods
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/srm/article/view/6157
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spelling doaj-8c6eb3a591e94b819558b7a52b5d5b9a2020-11-24T23:18:47ZengEuropean Survey Research AssociationSurvey Research Methods1864-33611864-33612016-04-01101354710.18148/srm/2016.v10i1.61576115Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose SurveysMelania Calinescu0Barry Schouten1Department of Mathematics, VU University AmsterdamStatistics Netherlands and Utrecht UniversityRecently, survey methodology literature has put forward responsive and adaptive survey designs as means to make efficient tradeoffs between survey quality and survey costs. The designs, however, restrict quality-cost assessments to nonresponse error, while there are various design features that impact also measurement error, e.g. the survey mode, the type of questionnaire (long or condensed) and the type of reporting (self or proxy). Extension of adaptive survey design to measurement error is, however, not straightforward when a survey has many and diverse survey items. An adaptive survey design needs to make an overall choice of design features that applies to all survey items simultaneously. In this paper, we investigate adaptive survey designs that account for both nonresponse and measurement error. In order to do so, we model the underlying causes for differences in measurement error between design features. This leads to response styles or response latencies. We tailor efforts so that either response style propensities are minimized or constrained. We illustrate the ideas with a case study on the 2008 Dutch Labor Force Survey. The design features in this study are the type of reporting (self-reporting only versus proxy-reporting allowed), and the number of face-to-face calls.https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/srm/article/view/6157Responsive survey designResponse errorMixed-mode surveysResponse latencies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Melania Calinescu
Barry Schouten
spellingShingle Melania Calinescu
Barry Schouten
Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose Surveys
Survey Research Methods
Responsive survey design
Response error
Mixed-mode surveys
Response latencies
author_facet Melania Calinescu
Barry Schouten
author_sort Melania Calinescu
title Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose Surveys
title_short Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose Surveys
title_full Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose Surveys
title_fullStr Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose Surveys
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive Survey Designs for Nonresponse and Measurement Error in Multi-Purpose Surveys
title_sort adaptive survey designs for nonresponse and measurement error in multi-purpose surveys
publisher European Survey Research Association
series Survey Research Methods
issn 1864-3361
1864-3361
publishDate 2016-04-01
description Recently, survey methodology literature has put forward responsive and adaptive survey designs as means to make efficient tradeoffs between survey quality and survey costs. The designs, however, restrict quality-cost assessments to nonresponse error, while there are various design features that impact also measurement error, e.g. the survey mode, the type of questionnaire (long or condensed) and the type of reporting (self or proxy). Extension of adaptive survey design to measurement error is, however, not straightforward when a survey has many and diverse survey items. An adaptive survey design needs to make an overall choice of design features that applies to all survey items simultaneously. In this paper, we investigate adaptive survey designs that account for both nonresponse and measurement error. In order to do so, we model the underlying causes for differences in measurement error between design features. This leads to response styles or response latencies. We tailor efforts so that either response style propensities are minimized or constrained. We illustrate the ideas with a case study on the 2008 Dutch Labor Force Survey. The design features in this study are the type of reporting (self-reporting only versus proxy-reporting allowed), and the number of face-to-face calls.
topic Responsive survey design
Response error
Mixed-mode surveys
Response latencies
url https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/srm/article/view/6157
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AT barryschouten adaptivesurveydesignsfornonresponseandmeasurementerrorinmultipurposesurveys
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