Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

 
 
Session Overview
Date: Friday, 10/Sept/2021
11:00 CEST Trach A_1: Track A: Survey Research: Advancements in Online and Mobile Web Surveys
Track A_2: Track A: Survey Research: Advancements in Online and Mobile Web Surveys
Track B: Data Science: From Big Data to Smart Data
Track C: Politics, Public Opinion, and Communication
Track D: Digital Methods in Applied Research
11:00 - 12:00 CEST A4.1: Respondent Behavior and Data Quality I
Chair: Florian Keusch, University of Mannheim, Germany
 

Satisficing Behavior across Time: Assessing Negative Panel Conditioning Using a Randomized Experiment

Fabienne Kraemer1, Henning Silber1, Bella Struminskaya2, Michael Bosnjak3, Joanna Koßmann3, Bernd Weiß1

1: GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; 2: Utrecht University, Department of Methodology and Statistics, Netherlands; 3: ZPID - Leibniz-Institute for Psychology, Germany



Consistency in straightlining across waves in the Understanding Society longitudinal survey

Olga Maslovskaya

University of Southampton, United Kingdom



Effects of ‘Simple Language’ on Data Quality in Web Surveys

Irina Bauer, Tanja Kunz, Tobias Gummer

GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany

A4.2: Scale and Question Format
Chair: Bella Struminskaya, Utrecht University, Netherlands, The
 

Investigating Direction Effects Across Rating Scales with Five and Seven Points in a Probability-based Online Panel

Jan Karem Höhne1, Dagmar Krebs2

1: University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany; 2: University of Gießen, Germany



Serious Tinder Research: Click vs. Swipe mechanism in mobile implicit research

Holger Lütters1, Steffen Schmidt2, Malte Friedrich-Freksa3, Oskar Küsgen4

1: HTW Berlin, Germany; 2: LINK Marketing Services AG, Switzerland; 3: GapFish GmbH, Germany; 4: pangea labs GmbH, Germany



The effects of the number of items per screen in mixed-device web surveys

Tobias Baier, Marek Fuchs

TU Darmstadt, Germany

B4: Social Media Data
Chair: Stefan Oglesby, data IQ AG, Switzerland
 

Accessing in-app social media advertising data: Measuring deployment and success of ads with real participant’s data on smartphones

Qais Kasem1, Ionut Andone1,2, Konrad Blaszkiewicz1,2, Felix Metzger1,2, Isabelle Halscheid1,4, Alexander Markowetz1,3

1: Murmuras, Germany; 2: University of Bonn, Germany; 3: Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany; 4: TH Köln, Germany



Public attitudes to linking survey and Twitter data

Curtis Jessop1, Natasha Phillips1, Mehul Kotecha1, Tarek Al Baghal2, Luke Sloan3

1: NatCen Social Research, United Kingdom; 2: Cardiff University, United Kingdom; 3: University of Essex, United Kingdom



Estimating Individual Socioeconomic Status of Twitter Users

Yuanmo He, Milena Tsvetkova

The London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom

C4: Web Tracking of News Exposure
Chair: Pirmin Stöckle, University of Mannheim, Germany
 

Post post-broadcast democracy? News exposure in the age of online intermediaries

Sebastian Stier1, Michael Scharkow2, Frank Mangold3, Johannes Breuer1

1: GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; 2: Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz; 3: University of Hohenheim



Populist Alternative News Use during Election Times in Germany

Ruben Bach, Philipp Müller

University of Mannheim, Germany



Explaining voting intention through online news consumption

François Erner1, Denis Bonnay2

1: respondi SAS, France; 2: respondi SAS, France; université paris-nanterre, France

D4: Podiumsdiskussion "16 Tage vor der Bundestagswahl – Die Rolle der Demoskopie für Wahlen"
Chair: Holger Geißler, marktforschung.de, Germany

(in German)

Programmpartner: marktforschung.de

Teilnehmer*innen:

Prof. Dr. Carsten Reinemann, LMU München

Dr. Yvonne Schroth, Mitglied des Vorstands der Forschungsgruppe Wahlen e.V.

Prof. Dr. Oliver Strijbis, SNF Förderungsprofessor am Institut für Politikwissenschaft, Universität Zürich Wahlen e.V.
12:00 - 12:10 CEST Break
12:10 - 1:10 CEST Keynote 2
 

Analytics at its Limit: How the Pandemic Challenges Data Journalism, Forces New Formats and Reveals Blind Spots

Christina Elmer

Der Spiegel, Germany

1:10 - 1:30 CEST Break
1:30 - 2:30 CEST A5.1: Respondent Behavior and Data Quality II
Chair: Otto Hellwig, respondi/DGOF, Germany
 

Looking up answers to political knowledge questions: the use of different instructions and measures for respondent behavior

Tobias Gummer1, Tanja Kunz1, Tobias Rettig2, Jan Karem Höhne3,4

1: GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; 2: University of Mannheim; 3: University of Duisburg-Essen; 4: RECSM-Universitat Pompeu Fabra



Better late than not at all? A systematic review on late responding in (web) surveys

Ellen Laupper1, Esther Kaufmann2, Ulf-Dietrich Reips2

1: Swiss Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training SFIVET, Switzerland; 2: University of Konstanz



The impact of perceived and actual respondent burden on response quality: Findings from a randomized web survey

Tanja Kunz, Tobias Gummer

GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany

A5.2: Survey Invitation Methodology
Chair: Florian Keusch, University of Mannheim, Germany
 

Comparing SMS and postcard reminders

Joanna Barry, Rachel Williams, Eileen Irvin

Ipsos MORI, United Kingdom



Evaluating probability-based Text message panel survey methodology

Chintan Turakhia1, Jennifer Su2

1: SSRS, United States of America; 2: SSRS, United States of America



Expansion of an Australian probability-based online panel using ABS, IVR and SMS push-to-web

Benjamin Phillips, Charles Dove, Paul Myers, Dina Neiger

The Social Research Centre, Australia

B5: Turning Unstructured Data into Insight (with Machine Learning)
Chair: Stefan Oglesby, data IQ AG, Switzerland
 

The Economics of Superstars: Inequalities of Visibility in the World of Online-Communication

Frank Heublein1, Reimund Homann2

1: Beck et al. GmbH, Germany; 2: IMWF Institut für Management- und Wirtschaftsforschung GmbH



Data Fusion for Better Insights: A medley of Conjoint and Time Series data

Julia Görnandt

SKIM, Germany



Contextualizing word embeddings with semi-structured interviews

Stefan Knauff

Bielefeld University, Germany

C5: Inequalities and Political Participation
Chair: Anna Rysina, Kantar GmbH, Germany
 

Representativeness in Research: How Well Do Online Samples Represent People of Color in the US?

Frances M. Barlas, Randall K. Thomas, Beatrice Abiero

Ipsos Public Affairs, United States of America



Does context matter? Exploring inequality patterns of youth political participation in Greece

Stefania Kalogeraki

University of Crete, Greece



Mobile Device Dependency in Everyday Life: Internet Use and Outcomes

Grant Blank1, Darja Groselj2

1: University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 2: University of Ljubljana, Slovenia

D5: Qualität in der Online-Forschung
Chair: Alexandra Wachenfeld-Schell, GIM Gesellschaft für Innovative Marktforschung mbH, Germany
Chair: Cathleen M. Stützer, TU Dresden, Germany

(in German)
 

Qualität und (nicht-)probabilistische Stichproben: "Über 'Repräsentativität' und 'Fitness-for-Purpose' in Online Panel Daten"

Carina Cornesse

University of Mannheim, Germany



Qualität und Social Media: "Potenziale und Herausforderungen der Survey-Rekrutierung seltener Populationen über soziale Medien"

Simon Kühne, Zaza Zindel

Bielefeld University, Germany



Qualität und Erfolgsmessung: "Aufmerksamkeit in der Informationssystem-Erfolgsmessung in professionellen Praxisgemeinschaften"

Ralf Klamma

RWTH Aachen, Germany

2:30 - 2:40 CEST Break
2:40 - 3:00 CEST GOR Award Ceremony
Chair: Bella Struminskaya, Utrecht University, Netherlands, The

This Years Awards Sponsors:
GOR Best Practice Award 2021 - respondi
GOR Poster Award 2021 - GIM
GOR Thesis Award 2021 - Tivian
DGOF Best Paper Award 2021 - Leibniz Institute for Psychology (ZPID)
3:00 - 3:10 CEST Break
3:10 - 4:20 CEST A6.1: Social Media Sampling
Chair: Otto Hellwig, respondi/DGOF, Germany
 

Using Facebook for Comparative Survey Research: Customizing Facebook Tools and Advertisement Content

Anja Neundorf, Aykut Ozturk

University of Glasgow, United Kingdom



Trolls, bots, and fake interviews in online survey research: Lessons learned from recruitment via social media

Zaza Zindel

Bielefeld University, Germany



Using Social Networks to Recruit Health Professionals for a Web Survey

Henning Silber, Christoph Beuthner, Steffen Pötzschke, Bernd Weiß, Jessica Daikeler

GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Mannheim, Germany

A6.2: Web Probing and Survey Design
Chair: Florian Keusch, University of Mannheim, Germany
 

What is the optimal design of multiple probes implemented in web surveys?

Cornelia Neuert, Timo Lenzner

GESIS, Germany



Analysis of Open-text Time Reference Web Probes on a COVID-19 Survey

Kristen L Cibelli Hibben, Valerie Ryan, Hoppe Travis, Scanlon Paul, Miller Kristen

National Center for Health Statistics



Reducing Respondent Burden with Efficient Survey Invitation Design

Hafsteinn Einarsson, Alexandru Cernat, Natalie Shlomo

University of Manchester, United Kingdom



Recruitment to a probability-based panel: question positioning, staggering information, and allowing people to say they’re ‘not sure’

Curtis Jessop, Marta Mezzanzanica

NatCen, United Kingdom

A6.3: Voice Recording in Surveys
Chair: Bella Struminskaya, Utrecht University, Netherlands, The
 

Willingness to provide voice-recordings in the LISS panel

Katharina Meitinger1, Matthias Schonlau2

1: Utrecht University, Netherlands; 2: University of Waterloo, Canada



Audio and voice inputs in mobile surveys: Who prefers these communication channels, and why?

Timo Lenzner1, Jan Karem Höhne2,3

1: GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; 2: University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany; 3: Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Research and Expertise Centre for Survey Methodology, Barcelona, Spain



Effect of Explicit Voice-to-Text Instructions on Unit Nonresponse and Measurement Errors in a General Population Web Survey

Z. Tuba Suzer-Gurtekin, Yingjia Fu, Peter Sparks, Richard Curtin

University of Michigan, United States of America

A6.4: Representativity in Online Panels
Chair: Ines Schaurer, City of Mannheim, Germany
 

Investigating self-selection bias of online surveys on COVID-19 pandemic-related outcomes and health characteristics

Bernd Weiß

GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany



Relationships between variables in probability-based and nonprobability online panels

Carina Cornesse, Tobias Rettig, Annelies G. Blom

University of Mannheim, Germany



Sampling in Online Surveys in Latin America: Assessing Matching vs. "Black Box" Approaches

Oscar Castorena1, Noam Lupu1, Maitagorri H Schade2, Elizabeth J Zechmeister1

1: Vanderbilt University; 2: Agora Verkehrswende

 
4:20 - 5:00 CEST Fare Well Drinks

 
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