AGENDA
March 3 – March 4, 2022
Steering Committee: Arie Kapteyn, Joanne Yoong, Jill Darling, Francisco Perez-Arce, USC Center for Economic and Social Research; and Andrew Parker, RAND Corporation.
All times are in Eastern Standard Time
DAY 1 |
Thursday, March 3, 2022 |
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10:00 AM |
Welcome Address by Arie Kapteyn (USC Center for Economic and Social Research) |
SESSION 1 10:15 AM |
Online Panels: Experiences from SingaporeSession Chair: Joanne Yoong (USC Center for Economic and Social Research) |
Seonghoon Kim (Singapore Management University)
Tracking Well-being of Older Individuals in Singapore |
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Joelle H. Fong (National University of Singapore)
Financial literacy and long-term care insurance ownership in the Singapore Life Panel |
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Alex Richard Cook (National University of Singapore)
Using an online panel to estimate population health risks |
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SESSION 2 11:05 AM |
Innovations in Data Collection for Probability-Based PanelsSession Chair: Peter Lugtig (Utrecht University) |
Bella Struminskaya (Utrecht University)
Data Donation: Issues of Nonparticipation |
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Andrew Warren (Financial Health Network)
Surveys and Financial Transaction Data: Comparisons of Different Data Collection Methodologies |
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Maikel Schwerdtfeger (GESIS Panel)
Investigating response behavior and data quality in a mobile-first layout experiment within a well-established panel survey |
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Katharina Meitinger (Utrecht University)
Implementing Voice-Recordings in a Probability-based Panel: What we learnt so far |
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Break |
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KEYNOTE 12:30 PM |
Frauke Kreuter (University of Maryland, LMU Munich)Robustness in an Uncertain World Session Chair: Arie Kapteyn (USC Center for Economic and Social Research) |
SESSION 3 1:30 PM |
Americans’ Experiences of COVID-19: Lessons from a Monthly Omnibus SurveySession Chair: Angela Hung (Robinhood) |
Debra Kalensky (Consumer Reports)
Trends in COVID-19 Concern and Vaccination |
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Jane Manweiler (Consumer Reports)
COVID-19 and Children |
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Tess M. Yanisch (Consumer Reports)
Economic Impacts of COVID-19 |
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Noemi Altman (Consumer Reports)
Covid-19 and the Explosion of Fintech |
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Karen Jaffe (Consumer Reports)
COVID-19 Adapting and looking forward |
2:30 PM |
Break |
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SESSION 4 2:45 PM |
Participation, Response Rates, and MeasurementsSession Chair: Marco Angrisani (USC Center for Economic and Social Research) |
Dina Neiger (The Social Research Centre)
Growing Pains: Balancing Longitudinal and Cross-Sectional Considerations for Managing and Expanding Probability Online Panels |
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Cesare A.F. Riillo (STATEC Research)
From an Official Survey to a Probability-based Online Panel: the Drivers to Opt-in |
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Sebastian Kocar (University of Tasmania) / Paul J. Lavrakas, Ph.D. (Independent Consultant)
Why do people say they participate in probability-based online panel surveys? |
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Sean McKinley (University of the New Hampshire Survey Center)
Benchmarking Probability-Based New England Web Panel Results in 2020-21 |
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Mansour Fahimi (Ipsos)
Innovations in Hybrid Sampling Techniques – Improving Representation of Online Samples for Teens and Young Adults |
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SESSION 5 3:45 PM |
Hurdles and recent progress in administering cognitive tests to Internet-based survey panelsSession Chair: Jill Darling (USC Center for Economic and Social Research) |
Margaret Gatz, Ph.D. (USC Center for Economic and Social Research)
Consequences of web-based consent protocols when assessing cognition in older adults |
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Amanda Selwood (Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing, UNSW Sydney, Australia)
Barriers to administering, retrieving and interpreting online cognitive testing in an older adult cohort |
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Ying Liu (USC Center for Economic and Social Research)
Self-administered web-based cognitive testing: Does environmental distraction matter? |
DAY 2 |
Friday, March 4, 2022 |
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10:00 AM |
Brief Introduction |
SESSION 6 10:05 AM |
Quality of Probability-Based Panels SamplesSession Chair: Matthias Schonlau (University of Waterloo) |
Jon A. Krosnick (Stanford University)
Explaining the Inaccuracy of 2016 Pre-election Poll Results from a Probability Sample Internet Panel: Base Weights, Post-stratification, and Vote Choice |
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Michael Ochsner (FORS, Lausanne, Switzerland)
Are Probabilistic Online Panels Representative? A new Framework for the Analysis of Representation Bias |
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Jenny Marlar (Gallup)
Combining Probability and non-Probability Panel Samples to Improve Inclusion of Low-Incidence Populations |
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Randall K. Thomas (Ipsos)
Aiming for the Bullseye: Does the Use of Targeted Sample Improve Probability-based Samples? |
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Ruoh-rong Yu (Center for Survey Research, Academia Sinica, Taiwan)
The Effects of Attention Checks on Item Response Time and Questionnaire Completion |
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SESSION 7 11:15 AM |
Employment research using probability panel surveysSession Chair: Andrew Parker (RAND Corporation) |
Kathleen J. Mullen (USC Center for Economic and Social Research)
The Value of Working Conditions in the United States and Implications for the Structure of Wages |
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Italo Lopez-Garcia (USC Center for Economic and Social Research)
Health-Related Work Capacity at Older Ages and Labor Market Outcomes |
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Marco Angrisani (USC Center for Economic and Social Research)
Workers’ Preferences and Expectations in the Aftermath of the Pandemic |
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Francisco Perez-Arce (USC Center for Economic and Social Research)
The Impact of the Pandemic on Subjective Work Probabilities at Older Ages |
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Break |
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SESSION 8 12: 30 PM |
Development and Management of Probability-Based Online PanelsSession Chair: Arie Kapteyn (USC Center for Economic and Social Research) |
Leigh Reardon (NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene)
The impact of mail delays on timely research: experiences from the Healthy NYC survey panel |
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Benjamin Phillips / Charles Dove (The Social Research Centre)
Expansion of an Australian Probability-Based Online Panel using ABS, IVR and SMS push-to-Web: Longer-Term Performance |
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Jamie Burnett (Kantar) / Tanja Kimova (Kantar)
Developing Probability-based panels in Europe |
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Ipek Bilgen (AmeriSpeak, NORC at the University of Chicago)
The impact of displaying cash via window envelope during mail contact when recruiting to a probability based panel |
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1:45 PM |
Break |
SESSION 9 2:00 PM |
Data Quality in Online PanelsSession Chair: Jeremy Burke (USC Center for Economic and Social Research) |
Kyle Berta (SSRS)
An Offer They Can’t Refuse? Evaluating Engagement Techniques Among Chronic Non-Responders in Probability Panels |
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Nick Bertoni (Pew Research Center)
Evaluating Data Quality in Online Panels with a Focus on Individual Respondents |
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Frances M. Barlas, Ph.D. (Ipsos)
Beware the Trap Door: Can Online Probability Sample Data Quality be Improved Using Trap Questions? |
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SESSION 10 2:45 PM |
COVID-19 and Longitudinal SurveysSession Chair: Gary Mottola (FINRA Foundation) |
Nicholas Biddle
Linking and analyzing a geographic/time specific stringency index to a probability-based longitudinal survey in Australia |
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Maria Prados (USC Center for Economic and Social Research)
School Re-openings, Educational Arrangements, and Labor Outcomes During COVID-19 |
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Katherine Carman (RAND Corporation)
The impact of COVID-19 on perceptions of systemic racism |
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Andrew Parker (RAND Corporation)
Evolution of COVID-19 Risk Perception and Mental Models |
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3:45 PM |
Closing Remarks |
Conference Organizers: Tania Gutsche and Tarra Kohli
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