Longer interviews may not affect subsequent survey participation propensity

Publication type

Understanding Society Working Paper Series

Series Number

2013-07

Series

Understanding Society Working Paper Series

Author

Publication date

December 16, 2013

Abstract:

Researchers often assume that respondent burden influences survey participation propensity and that interview length is a good indicator of burden. However, there is little evidence of the effect of interview length on subsequent participation propensity, particularly for face-to-face surveys. In a randomised experiment, respondents experienced interviews of different lengths at wave 1 of a panel survey. Subsequently, they were asked to complete a self-completion questionnaire and to take part in further waves of the survey. Response rates to these subsequent tasks are compared between those administered the shorter and longer versions of the wave 1 interview. No evidence is found that wave 1 interview length affects subsequent participation propensity.

Subject

Notes

PLEASE CITE AS: Lynn, P. (2014) ‘Longer interviews may not affect subsequent survey participation propensity’, Public Opinion Quarterly, 78(2):500-509. https://doi.org/10.1093/poq/nfu015


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