Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web Survey

Occupation is key in socioeconomic research. As in other survey modes, most web surveys use an open-ended question for occupation, though the absence of interviewers elicits unidentifiable or aggregated responses. Unlike other modes, web surveys can use a search tree with an occupation database. The...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tijdens Kea
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2014-03-01
Series:Journal of Official Statistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/jos-2014-0002
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spelling doaj-1e583eb307f44b5a9227f372ab8609572021-09-06T19:41:46ZengSciendoJournal of Official Statistics2001-73672014-03-01301234310.2478/jos-2014-0002jos-2014-0002Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web SurveyTijdens Kea0University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Institute for Advanced Labour Studies (AIAS), Postbus 94025 1090 GA, Amsterdam, The NetherlandsOccupation is key in socioeconomic research. As in other survey modes, most web surveys use an open-ended question for occupation, though the absence of interviewers elicits unidentifiable or aggregated responses. Unlike other modes, web surveys can use a search tree with an occupation database. They are hardly ever used, but this may change due to technical advancements. This article evaluates a three-step search tree with 1,700 occupational titles, used in the 2010 multilingual WageIndicator web survey for UK, Belgium and Netherlands (22,990 observations). Dropout rates are high; in Step 1 due to unemployed respondents judging the question not to be adequate, and in Step 3 due to search tree item length. Median response times are substantial due to search tree item length, dropout in the next step and invalid occupations ticked. Overall the validity of the occupation data is rather good, 1.7-7.5% of the respondents completing the search tree have ticked an invalid occupation.https://doi.org/10.2478/jos-2014-0002job titlecawioccupation databaseiscoparadatatime stampsrespondent’s interestrespondent’s age and educationtotal survey dropoutvalidity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tijdens Kea
spellingShingle Tijdens Kea
Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web Survey
Journal of Official Statistics
job title
cawi
occupation database
isco
paradata
time stamps
respondent’s interest
respondent’s age and education
total survey dropout
validity
author_facet Tijdens Kea
author_sort Tijdens Kea
title Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web Survey
title_short Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web Survey
title_full Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web Survey
title_fullStr Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web Survey
title_full_unstemmed Dropout Rates and Response Times of an Occupation Search Tree in a Web Survey
title_sort dropout rates and response times of an occupation search tree in a web survey
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Official Statistics
issn 2001-7367
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Occupation is key in socioeconomic research. As in other survey modes, most web surveys use an open-ended question for occupation, though the absence of interviewers elicits unidentifiable or aggregated responses. Unlike other modes, web surveys can use a search tree with an occupation database. They are hardly ever used, but this may change due to technical advancements. This article evaluates a three-step search tree with 1,700 occupational titles, used in the 2010 multilingual WageIndicator web survey for UK, Belgium and Netherlands (22,990 observations). Dropout rates are high; in Step 1 due to unemployed respondents judging the question not to be adequate, and in Step 3 due to search tree item length. Median response times are substantial due to search tree item length, dropout in the next step and invalid occupations ticked. Overall the validity of the occupation data is rather good, 1.7-7.5% of the respondents completing the search tree have ticked an invalid occupation.
topic job title
cawi
occupation database
isco
paradata
time stamps
respondent’s interest
respondent’s age and education
total survey dropout
validity
url https://doi.org/10.2478/jos-2014-0002
work_keys_str_mv AT tijdenskea dropoutratesandresponsetimesofanoccupationsearchtreeinawebsurvey
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