Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2785191954> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 59 of
59
with 100 items per page.
- W2785191954 abstract "Surveys—data collection based on standardized questionnaires— started with censuses thousands of years ago. However, it was only in the 1930s, following some breakthrough developments in applied statistics, that the sample survey data collection approach was widely acknowledged. The possibility of inferring about the total population from samples of 300 or 1,000 units radically expanded the potential of survey data collection. In addition to sampling, survey data collection procedures also rely on a proper measurement instrument (i.e., a survey questionnaire) as well as effective administrative and managerial activities. Since the 1930s, opinion polling has become a major tool of democratic development (Gallup & Rae, 1968). Official statistics have recognized the enormous potential of survey data collection for the fast estimation of crops, industry outputs, unemployment, and so forth. Further, the marketing and media industries obtained a tool to effectively measure the characteristics of their target groups. The survey industry has therefore become an established activity with its own associations (e.g., ESOMAR, AAPOR), codes of conduct, publications, conferences, professional profiles, and large multinational companies generating annual revenues worth billions of dollars (e.g., A.C. Nielsen). Surveys were traditionally performed as personal interviews, over the telephone or in the form of selfadministrated questionnaires. Information-communication technology (ICT) developments introduced radical changes to the survey data collection processes, particularly because the core of this activity is manipulation with the information itself. The early implementations of ICT in survey data collection are linked to computer developments. Mass computerization started with the emerging PC in the 1980s and enabled computer-assisted survey information collection (CASIC), firstly with the introductionn of computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI). In the late 1980s, portable computers started to be used with face-to-face interview data collection, leading to computer-assisted personal interviewing (CAPI). When personal computers started to become the mainstream, computerized self-administered questionnaires (CSAQ) were implemented in various forms. The last crucial milestone came in the 1990s with the rise of the Internet, which enabled e-mail and Web-based types of CSAQ. This started a new stream of ICT development which is radically transforming the entire survey industry. Internet-based data collection will soon become the mainstream survey mode. Studies for 2005 projected that market research organizations worldwide would generate over a billion dollars in revenue on the basis of Internet surveys (Terhanian & Bremer, 2005). In addition, about 40% of research work in the USA in 2003-2004 was conducted on the Internet (E-consultancy, 2004)." @default.
- W2785191954 created "2018-02-02" @default.
- W2785191954 creator A5083575454 @default.
- W2785191954 date "2009-01-01" @default.
- W2785191954 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W2785191954 title "The Technological Revolution in Survey Data Collection" @default.
- W2785191954 cites W1963846010 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W2042753631 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W2074328307 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W2075696786 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W2087029545 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W2094244305 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W2107592916 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W2107692961 @default.
- W2785191954 cites W41087924 @default.
- W2785191954 doi "https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-60566-014-1.ch185" @default.
- W2785191954 hasPublicationYear "2009" @default.
- W2785191954 type Work @default.
- W2785191954 sameAs 2785191954 @default.
- W2785191954 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2785191954 crossrefType "book-chapter" @default.
- W2785191954 hasAuthorship W2785191954A5083575454 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConcept C133462117 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConcept C2522767166 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConcept C36289849 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConceptScore W2785191954C133462117 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConceptScore W2785191954C144024400 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConceptScore W2785191954C2522767166 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConceptScore W2785191954C36289849 @default.
- W2785191954 hasConceptScore W2785191954C41008148 @default.
- W2785191954 hasLocation W27851919541 @default.
- W2785191954 hasOpenAccess W2785191954 @default.
- W2785191954 hasPrimaryLocation W27851919541 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W135837855 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W1680292406 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2011547518 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2075696786 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2084938972 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2150907352 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2198794249 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2274614362 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2323360704 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2392328636 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2502564389 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2731953711 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2773973282 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2795105486 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2808090304 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2913865745 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W2913895322 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W3175856262 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W3204373808 @default.
- W2785191954 hasRelatedWork W411570542 @default.
- W2785191954 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2785191954 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2785191954 magId "2785191954" @default.
- W2785191954 workType "book-chapter" @default.