EVALUATING THE MEASUREMENT ERROR OF INTERVIEWER OBSERVED PARADATA

Saved in:

Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: SINIBALDI, JENNIFER, DURRANT, GABRIELE B., KREUTER, FRAUKE
In: The Public Opinion Quarterly, 77, 2013, p. 173-193
published:
Oxford University Press
Media Type: Article, E-Article

Not logged in

further information
Physical Description: 173-193
ISSN: 0033-362X
1537-5331
published in: The Public Opinion Quarterly
Language: English
Subjects:
Table of Contents

<p>As survey researchers have begun exploiting paradata—for example, for the correction of nonresponse bias—the quality of these data has come into question. Inaccurate information is likely to affect the resulting statistics and conclusions drawn from such data. This paper focuses on one type of paradata, observations made by interviewers during the data-collection process, and assesses the quality of these observations by examining their measurement error properties. The analysis uses the UK Census Nonresponse Link Study, which links interviewers' observations collected on six major UK surveys with Census data. Comparing five interviewer observations with self-reports from the Census, the accuracy of the observations for both respondents and non-respondents to the surveys is evaluated. A multilevel modeling approach is used to explore under which conditions the interviewers' observations match the reports on the Census forms, accounting for the clustering of sample members within interviewers and areas. The analysis finds that the overall percent agreement between the observations and the Census is generally high, ranging from 87 to 98 percent. The type of housing structure and the final result code are significantly associated with measurement error. For four of the five observations, there is evidence that the interviewer significantly influences the level of measurement error, even after controlling for household, interviewer, and area characteristics. The results presented here will inform future analyses assessing the quality of interviewers' observations.</p>