Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection Protocol

To mitigate the potentially harmful effects of nonresponse, most surveys repeatedly follow up with nonrespondents, often targeting a response rate or predetermined number of completes. Each additional recruitment attempt generally brings in a new wave of data, but returns gradually diminish over the...

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Main Author: Lewis Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2017-09-01
Series:Journal of Official Statistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/jos-2017-0029
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spelling doaj-89b0751fe9c740a78d2c2e0cf545d6bb2021-09-06T19:40:52ZengSciendoJournal of Official Statistics2001-73672017-09-0133360162410.1515/jos-2017-0029jos-2017-0029Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection ProtocolLewis Taylor0U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM), 1900 E Street, NW, Washington, DC 20415. United States of America.To mitigate the potentially harmful effects of nonresponse, most surveys repeatedly follow up with nonrespondents, often targeting a response rate or predetermined number of completes. Each additional recruitment attempt generally brings in a new wave of data, but returns gradually diminish over the course of a fixed data collection protocol, as each subsequent wave tends to consist of fewer responses than the last. Consequently, point estimates begin to stabilize. This is the notion of phase capacity, suggesting some form of design change is in order, such as switching modes, increasing the incentive, or, as is considered exclusively in this research, discontinuing the nonrespondent follow-up campaign altogether. A previously proposed test for phase capacity calls for multiply imputing nonrespondents’ missing data to assess, retrospectively, whether the most recent wave of data significantly altered a key, nonresponse-adjusted point estimate. This study introduces a more flexible adaptation amenable to surveys that instead reweight the observed data to compensate for nonresponse. Results from a simulation study and application indicate that, all else equal, the weighting version of the test is more sensitive to point estimate changes, thereby dictating more follow-up attempts are warranted.https://doi.org/10.1515/jos-2017-0029responsive survey designmultiple imputationweightingnonresponse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lewis Taylor
spellingShingle Lewis Taylor
Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection Protocol
Journal of Official Statistics
responsive survey design
multiple imputation
weighting
nonresponse
author_facet Lewis Taylor
author_sort Lewis Taylor
title Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection Protocol
title_short Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection Protocol
title_full Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection Protocol
title_fullStr Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection Protocol
title_full_unstemmed Univariate Tests for Phase Capacity: Tools for Identifying When to Modify a Survey’s Data Collection Protocol
title_sort univariate tests for phase capacity: tools for identifying when to modify a survey’s data collection protocol
publisher Sciendo
series Journal of Official Statistics
issn 2001-7367
publishDate 2017-09-01
description To mitigate the potentially harmful effects of nonresponse, most surveys repeatedly follow up with nonrespondents, often targeting a response rate or predetermined number of completes. Each additional recruitment attempt generally brings in a new wave of data, but returns gradually diminish over the course of a fixed data collection protocol, as each subsequent wave tends to consist of fewer responses than the last. Consequently, point estimates begin to stabilize. This is the notion of phase capacity, suggesting some form of design change is in order, such as switching modes, increasing the incentive, or, as is considered exclusively in this research, discontinuing the nonrespondent follow-up campaign altogether. A previously proposed test for phase capacity calls for multiply imputing nonrespondents’ missing data to assess, retrospectively, whether the most recent wave of data significantly altered a key, nonresponse-adjusted point estimate. This study introduces a more flexible adaptation amenable to surveys that instead reweight the observed data to compensate for nonresponse. Results from a simulation study and application indicate that, all else equal, the weighting version of the test is more sensitive to point estimate changes, thereby dictating more follow-up attempts are warranted.
topic responsive survey design
multiple imputation
weighting
nonresponse
url https://doi.org/10.1515/jos-2017-0029
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