Displaying Publications 1 - 30 of 46 in total
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Nurse effects on non-response in survey-based biomeasures
Alexandru Cernat, Joseph W. Sakshaug, Tarani Chandola, et al.
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Understanding Society at 10 years
Lucinda Platt, Gundi Knies, Renee Reichl Luthra, et al.
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Nurse effects on measurement error in household biosocial surveys
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Does repeated measurement improve income data quality?
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Longitudinal surveys - unique opportunities and unique methodological challenges
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The change and stability of NEO scores over six-years: a British study and a short review
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Reliability and stability of the standard fear of crime indicator in a national panel over 14 years
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Misspecification effects in the analysis of panel data
Marcel de Toledo Vieira, Peter W.F. Smith, and Maria de Fátima Salgueiro
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Correction of misclassification error in disability rates
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Investigating non-ignorable dropout in panel studies of residential mobility
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Can I just check...? Effects of edit check questions on measurement error and survey estimates
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Poverty, preference or pensioners? Measuring material deprivation in the UK
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Measuring match quality using subjective data
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Perception and retrospection: the dynamic consistency of responses to survey questions on wellbeing
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A comparison of earnings measures from longitudinal and cross-sectional surveys: evidence from the UK
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Death of a partner: financial implications and experience of loss
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Differences in the measurement and structure of wealth using alternative data sources: the case of the UK
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Ill-health as a household norm: evidence from other people's health problems
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Measurement error in stylised and diary data on time use
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Sesgo de respuesta y heterogeneidad en salud autopercibida. Evidencia del Panel de Hogares Británico
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Implementing a mixed methods approach to explore the financial implications of death of a life partner
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Questionnaire discrimination: (re)-introducing coefficient delta
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'How many hours do you usually work?' An analysis of the working hours questions in 26 large-scale surveys in six countries and the European Union
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Health-related non-response in the the British Household Panel Survey and European Community Household Panel: using inverse-probability-weighted estimators in non-linear models
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Explaining income-nonresponse: a case study by means of the British Household Panel Study (BHPS)
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Using simulation-based inference with panel data in health economics
Paul Contoyannis, Andrew M. Jones, and Roberto Leon-Gonzalez
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Attitudes and measurement error revisited: a reply to Johnston and Pattie
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Are inconsistent individual attitudes nothing more than random error? A response to Sturgis
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People mining
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Modelling car ownership using the British Household Panel Survey