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Session Submission Type: Created Panel
This panel offers fresh methodological approaches in the evolving landscape of online survey research, tackling issues of data quality, respondent engagement, and post-survey analysis. It examines the challenges posed by commercial panel recruitment, the impact of survey professionalism on data integrity, and the need for advanced techniques to address respondent disenagement, especially in politically sensitive contexts. By exploring the use of web browsing data to understand respondent behavior, introducing partial-identification strategies to address lack of respondent attention, and assessing strategies to improve panel retention among diverse groups, the discussions push the boundaries of traditional survey methods.
Survey Professionalism: New Evidence from Browsing Data - Bernhard Clemm von Hohenberg, GESIS Institute for the Social Sciences; Tiago Augusto da Silva Ventura, Georgetown University; Magdalena Wojcieszak, UC Davis, U of Amsterdam; Jonathan Nagler, New York University; Ericka Menchen-Trevino, American University
A Statistical Framework to Engage the Problem of Disengaged Survey Respondents - Matthew Tyler, Rice University; Justin Grimmer, Stanford University; Sean Westwood, Dartmouth College
Retrieving True Preference under Authoritarianism - Jongyoon Baik, University of Pennsylvania; Xiaoxiao Shen, Princeton University
How to Maintain a Panel of Political Migrants: Evidence from a Field Experiment - Ivetta Sergeeva, Stanford University; Emil Kamalov, European University Institute