ISBN-13: 9780471678519 / Angielski / Miękka / 2004 / 590 str.
ISBN-13: 9780471678519 / Angielski / Miękka / 2004 / 590 str.
Presents a comprehensive treatment of survey errors and the costs and benefits of alternative survey designs, integrating statistical and social science perspectives on survey design. Considers coverage error, nonresponse error, sampling error, and measurement error, including the effects of interviewers and respondents, the wording of the questionnaire, and mode of data collection. A review of the social science and statistical literatures on survey errors is included, and the relationships between the different types of errors are explored. Presents cost models designed to reduce the various types of errors.
"Survey Errors and Survey Costs is a well–written, well–presented, and highly readable text that should be on every error–conscious statistician′s bookshelf. Any courses that cover the theory and design of surveys should certainly have Survey Errors and Survey Costs on their reading lists." (Survey Errors and Survey Costs, 28 May 2014)
1. An Introduction to Survey Errors.
1.1 Diverse Perspectives on Survey Research.
1.2 The Themes of Integration: Errors and Costs.
1.3 The Languages of Error.
1.4 Classifications of Error Within Survey Statistics.
1.5 Terminology of Errors in Psychological Measurement.
1.6 The Language of Errors in Econometrics.
1.7 Debates About Inferential Errors.
1.8 Important features of language Differences.
1.9 Summary: The Tyranny of the Measurable.
1.10 Summary and Plan of This Book.
2. An Introduction to Survey Costs.
2.1 Rationale for a Joint Concern About Costs and Errors.
2.2 Use of Cost and Error Models in Sample Design.
2.3 Criticisms of Cost–Error Modeling to Guide Survey Decisions.
2.4 Nonlinear Cost Models Often Apply to Practical Survey Administration.
2.5 Survey Cost Models are Inherently Discontinuous.
2.6 Cost Models Often Have Stochastic Features.
2.7 Domains of Applicability of Cost Models Must Be Specified.
2.8 Simulation Studies Might Be Best Suited to Design Decisions.
2.9 Is Time Money?
2.10 Summary: Cost Models and Survey Errors.
3. Costs and Errors of Covering the Population.
3.1 Definitions of Populations Relevant to the Survey.
3.2 Coverage Error in Descriptive Statistics.
3.3 An Approach to Coverage Error in Analytic Statistics.
3.4 Components of Coverage Error.
3.5 Coverage Problems with the Target Population of Households.
3.6 Measurement of and Adjustments for Noncoverage Error.
3.7 Survey Cost Issues Involving Coverage Error.
3.8 Summary.
4. Nonresponse in Sample Surveys.
4.1 Nonresponse Rates.
4.2 Response Rate Calculation.
4.3 Temporal Change in Response Rates.
4.4 Item Missing Data.
4.5 Statistical Treatment of Nonresponse in Surveys.
4.6 Summary.
5. Probing the Causes of Nonresponse and Efforts to Reduce Nonresponse.
5.1 Empricial Correlates of Survey Participation.
5.2 Efforts by Survey Methodologists to Reduce Refusals.
5.3 Sociological Concepts Relevant to Survey Nonresponse.
5.4 Psychological Attributes of Nonrespondents.
5.5 Summary.
6. Costs and Errors Arising from Sampling.
6.1 Introduction.
6.2 The nature of Sampling Error.
6.3 Measuring Sampling Error.
6.4 Four Effects of the Design on Sampling Error.
6.5 The Effect of Nonsampling Errors on Sampling Error Estimates.
6.6 Measuring Sampling Errors on Sample Means and Proportions from Complex Samples.
6.7 The Debate on Reflecting the Sample Design in Estimating Analytic Statistics.
6.8 Reflecting the Sample Design When Estimating Complex Statistics.
6.9 Summary.
7. Empirical Estimation of Survey Measurement Error.
7.1 A First Estimation of Observational Errors Versus Errors of Nonobservation.
7.2 Laboratory Experiments Resembling the Survey Interview.
7.3 Measures External to the Survey.
7.4 Randomized Assignment of Measurement Procedures to Sample Persons.
7.5 Repeated measurements of the Same Persons.
7.6 Summary of Individual Techniques of Measurement Errors Estimation.
7.7 Combinations of Design Features.
7.8 Summary.
8. The Interviewer as a Source of Survey Measurement Error.
8.1 Alternative Views on the Role of the Observer.
8.2 The Roles of the Survey Interviewer.
8.3 Designs for Measuring Interview Variance.
8.4 Interviewer Effects in Personal Interview Surveys.
8.5 Interviewer Effects in Centralized Telephone Surveys.
8.6 Explaining the Magnitude of Interviewer Effects.
8.7 Summary of Research on Interviewer Variance.
8.8 Measurement of Interviewer Compliance With Training Guidelines.
8.9 Experiments in Manipulating Interviewer Behavior.
8.10 Social Psychological and Sociological Explanations for Response Error Associated with Interviewers.
8.11 Summary.
9. The Respondent as a Source of Measurement Error.
9.1 Components of Response Formation Process.
9.2 The Encoding Process and the Absence of Knowledge Relevant to the Survey Question.
9.3 Comprehension of the Survey Question.
9.4 Retrieval of Information from Memory.
9.5 Judgment of Appropriate Answer.
9.6 Communication of Response.
9.7 Sociological and Demographic Correlates of Respondent Error.
9.8 Summary.
10. Measurement Errors Associated with the Questionnaire.
101 Properties of Words in Questions.
10.2 Properties of Question Structure.
10.3 Properties of Question Order.
10.4 Conclusions About Measurement Error Related to the Questionnaire.
10.5 Estimates of Measurement Error from Multiple Indicator Models.
10.6 Cost Models Associated with Measurement Error Through the Questionnaire.
10.7 Summary.
11. Response Effects of the Mode of Data Collection.
11.1 Two Very Different Questions About Mode of Data Collection.
11.2 Properties of Media of Communication.
11.3 Applying Theories of Mediated Communication to Survey Research.
11.4 Findings from the Telephone Survey Literature.
11.5 Interaction Effects of Mode and Other Design.
11.6 Survey Costs and the Mode of Data Collection.
11.7 Cost and Error Modeling with Telephone and Face to Face Surveys.
11.8 Summary.
References.
Index.
ROBERT M. GROVES, PhD, is presently Program Director (Senior Research Scientist) in the Survey Research Center of the University of Michigan, where he also serves as Director in the Institute for Social Research and Professor of Sociology. He also holds a joint appointment as Research Professor at the University of Maryland.
The Wiley–Interscience Paperback Series consists of selected books that have been made more accessible to consumers in an effort to increase global appeal and general circulation. With these new unabridged softcover volumes, Wiley hopes to extend the lives of these works by making them available to future generations of statisticians, mathematicians, and scientists.
"Survey Errors and Survey Costs is a well–written, well–presented, and highly readable text that should be on every error–conscious statistician’s bookshelf. Any courses that cover the theory and design of surveys should certainly have Survey Errors and Survey Costs on their reading lists."
Phil Edwards
MEL, Aston University Science Park, UK
Review in The Statistician, Vol. 40, No. 3, 1991
"This volume is an extremely valuable contribution to survey methodology. It has many virtues: First, it provides a framework in which survey errors can be segregated by sources. Second, Groves has skillfully synthesized existing knowledge, bringing together in an easily accessible form empirical knowledge from a variety of sources. Third, he has managed to integrate into a common framework the contributions of several disciplines. For example, the work of psychometricians and cognitive psychologists is made relevant to the research of econometricians as well as the field experience of sociologists. Finally, but not least, Groves has managed to present all this in a style that is accessible to a wide variety of readers ranging from survey specialists to policymakers."
Peter H. Rossi
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Review in Journal of Official Statistics, January 1991
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