Designing Surveys Acknowledging Nonresponse

Actors and Questions in Telephone and Personal Interview Surveys

This paper concentrates on two aspects of telephone survey administration: (1) the respondent's reactions to the request for an interview and to the interview itself, and (2) the properties of questions using response cards in personal interviews and adaptations of these questions for telephone use.

Implications of CATI: Costs, Errors, and Organization of Telephone Survey Research

Interviewer variance

Research on Survey Data Quality

Computer assissted telephone interviewing

Measurement errors across the disciplines

Survey error models and cognitive theories of response behavior

The Intersection of Immigration and Gender: Labor Force Outcomes of Immigrant Women Scientists

Educational Expectations of Asian-American Youth: Determinants and Ethnic Differences