Displaying all 15 Publications
Current search: 'Information And Communication Technologies' and 'Jonathan Burton'
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High frequency online data collection in an annual household panel study: some evidence on bias prevention and bias adjustment
Michaela Benzeval, Jonathan Burton, Thomas F. Crossley, et al.
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Understanding and improving data linkage consent in surveys
Annette Jäckle, Jonathan Burton, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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Briefing note COVID-19 survey: home schooling
Michaela Benzeval, Magda Borkowska, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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The effects of personalized feedback on participation and reporting in mobile app data collection
Alexander Wenz, Annette Jäckle, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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Mode effects
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The implementation of fieldwork design initiatives to improve survey quality
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Increasing participation in a mobile app study: the effects of a sequential mixed-mode design and in-interview invitation
Annette Jäckle, Alexander Wenz, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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Participation in a mobile app survey to collect expenditure data as part of a large-scale probability household panel: coverage and participation rates and biases
Annette Jäckle, Jonathan Burton, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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Adaptive push-to-web: experiments in a household panel study
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Understanding how people think about their daily spending
Mary Suffield, Heidi Hasbrouck, Alice Coulter, et al.
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Improving household finances data with joint interviewing and a balance edit: cognitive testing of a 'Benefit Unit Finance' module
Tim Hanson, Phil Westwood, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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Participation in a mobile app survey to collect expenditure data as part of a large-scale probability household panel: response rates and response biases
Annette Jäckle, Jonathan Burton, Mick P. Couper, et al.
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Using an App to collect detailed expenditure data in a probability household panel survey: response rates, response biases and measurement quality
Annette Jäckle, Carli Lessof, Jonathan Burton, et al.
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Going online with a face-to-face household panel: effects of a mixed mode design on item and unit non-response
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Going online with a face-to-face household panel: initial results from an experiment on the Understanding Society Innovation Panel