Switching a Face-to-Face Panel to Self-Administered Survey Modes: Experimental Evidence on Effects of Mode Assignment on Response and Selectivity

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2025.v19i1.8427

Keywords:

Panel, mode, self-administered, face-to-face, response, bias, experiment

Abstract

Based on a mode experiment implemented in pairfam, a large, established German panel study, we investigate whether switching a panel from face-to-face to push-to-web survey mode leads to increased attrition and selectivity. We find that the redesign increases overall attrition by almost six percentage points, and causes even larger losses among full-time employed, self-employed, and less educated respondents. Two of the Big Five personality traits moderate the mode effect: conscientiousness and openness, while no differences are found for agreeableness, neuroticism, and extraversion. These results suggest that mode changes in a panel study bear risk for data quality in terms of sample size and selectivity.

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Published

2025-04-10

How to Cite

Schröder, J., Schmiedeberg, C., Brüderl, J., & Christiane, B. (2025). Switching a Face-to-Face Panel to Self-Administered Survey Modes: Experimental Evidence on Effects of Mode Assignment on Response and Selectivity. Survey Research Methods, 19(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2025.v19i1.8427

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