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100 results on '"online panel"'

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1. Measuring Expenditure with a Mobile App: Do Probability-Based and Nonprobability Panels Differ?

2. Why do Experiments Fail? Six Practical Suggestions for Successful Online Experiments.

3. Modeling Group-Specific Interviewer Effects on Survey Participation Using Separate Coding for Random Slopes in Multilevel Models.

4. Dataset of media practices for informational, educational, and entertainment purposes in Peru: Uses and gratifications approach

5. Experimental Evidence on Panel Conditioning Effects when Increasing the Surveying Frequency in a Probability-Based Online Panel

6. Memory Effects in Online Panel Surveys: Investigating Respondents’ Ability to Recall Responses from a Previous Panel Wave

7. Response Quality in Nonprobability and Probability-based Online Panels.

8. Measurement instruments for fast and frequent data collection during the early phase of COVID-19 in Germany: reflections on the Mannheim Corona Study

9. Recruiting controls from an online panel for a case–control study enabled a timely and reliable foodborne Salmonella outbreak investigation, Germany 2021.

10. Memory Effects: A Comparison Across Question Types

11. Usability Evaluations Employing Online Panels Are Not Bias-Free.

12. Building a Web Tracking Browser Information System: The Online Panel as a Research Method in Internet Studies

13. Do previous survey experience and participating due to an incentive affect response quality? Evidence from the CRONOS panel.

14. Representativeness in six waves of CROss‐National Online Survey (CRONOS) panel.

15. From German Internet Panel to Mannheim Corona Study: Adaptable probability‐based online panel infrastructures during the pandemic.

16. Use of a non-probabilistic online panel as a control group for case–control studies to investigate food and waterborne outbreaks in Lower Saxony, Germany.

17. Gambling Harm and the Prevention Paradox in Massachusetts.

18. Paid online convenience samples in gambling studies: questionable data quality.

19. Establishing a baseline: bringing innovation to the evaluation of cross-national probability-based online panels

20. The Long-Term Impact of Different Offline Population Inclusion Strategies in Probability-Based Online Panels: Evidence From the German Internet Panel and the GESIS Panel.

21. Development of an international survey attitude scale: measurement equivalence, reliability, and predictive validity

22. Patient and public involvement in designing and conducting doctoral research: the whys and the hows

23. Usability Evaluations Employing Online Panels Are Not Bias-Free

24. Using Attention Testing to Select Crowdsourced Workers and Research Participants.

25. High Frequency and High Quality Survey Data Collection

26. The Living Lab on Media Content and Platforms: Results from six months of web browser tracking.

31. Mode System Effects in an Online Panel Study: Comparing a Probability-based Online Panel with two Face-to-Face Reference Surveys

32. The Use of a Nonprobability Internet Panel to Monitor Sexual and Reproductive Health in the General Population.

33. Online panel data quality: a sentiment analysis based on a deep learning approach

37. ТЕНДЕНЦІЇ МАРКЕТИНГОВИХ ДОСЛІДЖЕНЬ: ОНЛАЙН ПАНЕЛІ ТА ОНЛАЙН СПІЛЬНОТИ

38. Does the Recruitment of Offline Households Increase the Sample Representativeness of Probability-Based Online Panels? Evidence From the German Internet Panel.

39. The Survey Attitude Scale

40. Collaborative learning framework for online stakeholder engagement.

41. Improving Survey Response Rates in Online Panels.

42. Metrics and Design Tool for Building and Evaluating Probability-Based Online Panels.

43. Comparison of telephone RDD and online panel survey modes on CPGI scores and co-morbidities.

44. Setting Up an Online Panel Representative of the General Population: The German Internet Panel.

46. From German Internet Panel to Mannheim Corona Study: Adaptable probability-based online panel infrastructures during the pandemic

47. Effects of Lotteries on Response Behavior in Online Panels.

48. How Do Lotteries and Study Results Influence Response Behavior in Online Panels?

49. Does hosting the Olympic Games matter? Canada and Olympic Games images before and after the 2010 Olympic Games.

50. Reminders in Web-Based Data Collection: Increasing Response at the Price of Retention?

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