2019
DOI: 10.1093/jssam/smz008
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Web Versus Other Survey Modes: An Updated and Extended Meta-Analysis Comparing Response Rates

Abstract: Abstract Do web surveys still yield lower response rates compared with other survey modes? To answer this question, we replicated and extended a meta-analysis done in 2008 which found that, based on 45 experimental comparisons, web surveys had an 11 percentage points lower response rate compared with other survey modes. Fundamental changes in internet accessibility and use since the publication of the original meta-analysis would suggest that people’s propensity … Show more

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Cited by 257 publications
(203 citation statements)
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“…Previous studies show that web surveys in general produce approximately 10-11% lower response rate than other survey modes, such as paper and telephone (7,28). A recent meta-analyses, including over 100 experiments, con rm these results and show a 12 % response rate difference between web-surveys and other modes (19). The exception is among students, were the results are more mixed.…”
Section: Implications Of the Chosen Survey Designmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Previous studies show that web surveys in general produce approximately 10-11% lower response rate than other survey modes, such as paper and telephone (7,28). A recent meta-analyses, including over 100 experiments, con rm these results and show a 12 % response rate difference between web-surveys and other modes (19). The exception is among students, were the results are more mixed.…”
Section: Implications Of the Chosen Survey Designmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Many factors influence response rates, including characteristics of the recruitment base (e.g., demographics, population type), sampling and recruitment methods (e.g., probability sampling from a known sampling frame with direct invitation of a purposefully selected group vs. non‐probability sampling of an easily accessible group), number of contact attempts, survey completion incentives (e.g., monetary compensation), survey sponsorship (e.g. governmental, academic, commercial), as well as survey topic, length, and modality (Daikeler, BosnJak, & Manfreda 2019; Fan & Yan, 2010; Guo, Kopec, Cibere, Li, & Goldsmith, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although response rate trends have been examined across populations and survey modalities (Daikeler et al, 2019), there is a dearth of research exploring nonresponse bias and its impact in survey research with veterans. This is true both among the veteran population as a whole, as well as in specific veteran subgroups for which there is a critical need to improve understanding of health and health care utilization.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent meta-analyses, including over 100 experiments, con rm these results and show a 12 % response rate difference between web-surveys and other modes (19). The exception is among students, were the results are more mixed.…”
Section: Implications Of the Chosen Survey Designmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…The expectation is that previous problems with under-coverage in web-surveys will decrease when internet use is becoming more spread across all societal groups (18). So far, response-rates have been found to be consistently lower in web-surveys compared with other survey modes (19) and web-surveys have been found to have lower survey representativeness compared with other single mode surveys (5). The exception is among younger age groups, were a web-survey is likely to generate similar response rates as a paper-survey (3,13).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%