The past, present, and future of research on interviewer effects


Olson, Kristen ; Smyth, Jolene D. ; Dykema, Jennifer ; Holbrook, Allyson L. ; Kreuter, Frauke ; West, Brady T.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.1201/9781003020219-2
URL: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/past-presen...
Additional URL: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/341304891...
Document Type: Book chapter
Year of publication: 2020
Book title: Interviewer effects from a total survey error perspective
Page range: 3-16
Publisher: Olson, Kristen ; Smyth, Jolene D. ; Dykema, Jennifer ; Holbrook, Allyson L. ; Kreuter, Frauke ; West, Brady T.
Place of publication: Boca Raton, FL
Publishing house: Chapman and Hall/CRC Press
ISBN: 978-0-36789631-7 , 978-1-00-302021-9 , 978-1-00006447-6 , 978-1-00-006446-9 , 978-1-00-006445-2
Publication language: English
Institution: Außerfakultäre Einrichtungen > Mannheim Centre for European Social Research - Research Department A
School of Social Sciences > Statistik u. Sozialwissenschaftliche Methodenlehre (Kreuter 2014-2020)
Subject: 300 Social sciences, sociology, anthropology
Abstract: In an increasing number of surveys, interviewers are tasked with collecting blood, saliva, and other biomeasures, and asking survey respondents for consent to link survey data to administrative records. Errors introduced by interviewers can take the form of bias or variance. Early research found that interviewers vary in how they administer survey questions and that their effects were similar to sample clusters in both face-to-face and telephone surveys. Given the nesting of respondents within interviewers, hierarchical or random effects models have long been used for the study of interviewer effects. Multilevel models are flexible and can be used to infer whether interviewer effects differ across subgroups of items, respondents, and interviewers. At the bare minimum, an anonymized interviewer ID variable on data files would allow analysts to estimate interviewer variance components. Additional data on interviewers, extending beyond simply demographics and experience, would facilitate understanding the mechanisms by which interviewers affect survey data.




Dieser Eintrag ist Teil der Universitätsbibliographie.




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BASE: Olson, Kristen ; Smyth, Jolene D. ; Dykema, Jennifer ; Holbrook, Allyson L. ; Kreuter, Frauke ; West, Brady T.

Google Scholar: Olson, Kristen ; Smyth, Jolene D. ; Dykema, Jennifer ; Holbrook, Allyson L. ; Kreuter, Frauke ; West, Brady T.

ORCID: Olson, Kristen ; Smyth, Jolene D. ; Dykema, Jennifer ; Holbrook, Allyson L. ; Kreuter, Frauke ORCID: 0000-0002-7339-2645 ; West, Brady T. ["search_editors_ORCID" not defined] Olson, Kristen ; Smyth, Jolene D. ; Dykema, Jennifer ; Holbrook, Allyson L. ; Kreuter, Frauke ORCID: 0000-0002-7339-2645 ; West, Brady T.

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