Proceedings of the Survey Research Methods Section, American Statistical Association (1993)

Ivited Papers by Topic
Volume I

I. Methodology and Applications of Smail Area Estimation
Organizer:
David A. Marker, Westat, Inc.
Chair:
Wayne A. Fuller, Iowa State University

Indirect Estimators: Definition, Characteristics, and Recommendations - Wesley L. Schaible, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 1

Small Area Estimation for the U.S. National Health Interview Survey - David A. Marker, Westat, Inc. ............... 11

Small Area Estimation Using Multi-Level Models - D. Holt and F. Moura, University of Southampton ............... 21

 

II. Multiple Views About Multiple Imputation
Organizer: Sissan C. Hostetter, Internal Revenue Service
Chair: Fritz Scheuren. Internal Revenue Service

Jackknife Variance Estimation with Imputed Survey Data - J.N.K. Rao, Carleton University ............... 31

Valid Inferences from Imputed Survey Data - Robert E. Fay, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 41

 

III. Integrating Statistical Process Control Techniques into the Survey Process
Chair/Organizer: Robert L. Santos, University of Michigan

Continuous Quality Improvement for Survey Operations: General Principles and Applications - Paul Biemer and Rachel Caspar, Researeh Triangle Institute ............... 49

Statistical Process Control in Decennial Census Industry and Occupation Coding - Michael Mersch, Phil Gbuz,and Chad Russell, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 58

 

IV. Classification, Collection and Analysis of Data on Minority Populations: Issues and Methods
Chair/Organizer: Patricia M. Golden, National Center for Health Statistics

Evaluating Racial and Ethnic Reporting in the 1990 Census - Nampeo McKenney, Claudette Bennett, Roderick Harrison, and Jorge del Pinal, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 66

Collecting Health Data on Minority Populations in a National Survey - James T. Massey, National Center for Health Statistics; David Judkins and Joseph Waksberg, Westat, Inc. ............... 75

Discussion - Thomas B. Jabine, Statistical Consultant ............... 85

 

V. What Do We Know About the Rich?
Chair/Organizer: Roberton Williams, Congressional Budget Office

Sampling for Household Financial Characteristics Using Frame Information on Past Income - Arthur B. Kennickell and Douglas A. McManus, Federal Reserve Board ............... 88

 

VI. Exploring the Imputation of Income, Expenditures and Assets in Household Surveys
Organizer: Stephanie Shipp, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Chair: Charles H. Alexander, U.S. Bureau of the Census

Modeling Income in the U.S. Consumer Expenditure Survey - Geoffrey D. Paulin, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; Elizabeth M. Sweet, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 98

Imputation of Item Missing Data in the Health and Retirement Survey - Steven G. Heeringa, University of Michigan ............... 107

Discussion - Roderick J. A. Little, University of Michigan ............... 117

 

VII. The 2000 Census: Alternative Designs and Early Research Results
Organizer: Robert D. Tortora, U.S. Bureau of the Census
Chair: Barbara E. Bryant, University of Michigan

Onward Towards a 2000 Census Design: Research Results - Robert D. Tortora, Susan M. Miskura and Don A. Dillman, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 120

What Will the Next Census Cost? The Use of Cost and Operational Modeling in the Examination of Alternative 2000 Census Designs - Jay Keller and Carol Van Horn, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 129

Discussion - Norman M. Bradburn, University of Chicago ............... 138

Discussion - Ivan P. Fellegi, Statistics Canada ............... 141

 

Contributed Papers by Topic

I. How Residence Relates to Coverage in the Census
Organizer:
Gary Shapiro, U.S. Bureau of the Census
Chair: Elizabeth M. Sweet, U.S. Bureau of the Census

An Empirical Exploration of Residence Rules: The Living Situation Survey - Laurel Schwede, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 144

Understanding Residence Terms: The Meaning of Census Terms to Respondents - Eleanor R. Gerber, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 150

The Myth of the Man Under the Bed - Leslie A. Brownrigg and Peter Wobus, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 156

Coverage Improvement from Experimental Residence Questions - Anne T. Kearney, Gary M. Shapiro and Lawrence R. Ernst, U.S. Bureau of the Census; Roger Tourangeau, National Opinion Research Center ............... 162

 

II. Aspects of Automated Data Collection in Surveys
Chair: Mary Grace Kovar, National Center for Health Statistics

Paperless Fax Image Reporting System (PFIRS) - Errol G. Rowe and Martin V Appel, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 168

Three Aspects of CLASIC - John S. Gardenier, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 173

Coding Major Field of Study - Larry G. Bobbitt and CD. Carroll, National Center for Education Statistics ............... 177

Using CAPI for the Medicare Health Status Registiy Reinterview Surveys: Design and Operation - Judith T Lessler, Bartelle; Frank Mierzwa and Tim Smith, Research Triangle Institute ............... 183

The Impact of Computer-Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPl) on Interviewer Performance: The CPS Experience - Mick P. Couper, U.S. Bureau of the Census and University of Michigan; Geraldine Burt, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 189

 

III. Applied Sampling Problems
Chair:
John S. Haeussler, University of Michigan

The Effectiveness of Oversampling for Low Income Populations in the Survey of Income and Program Participation - Tiwanda M. Allen, Rita J. Petroni and Rajendra P. Singh, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 194

The Challenge of Redesigning the Consumer Price Index Area Sample - Janet L. Williams and Eugene F. Brown, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; Gary R. Zion, National Institute of Dental Research ............... 200

Sampling Prenatal Care Providers from a Frame of Physicians - William D. Kalsbeek and Martha J. Mancewicz, University of North Carolina ............... 206

Statistics of Income Partnership Studies: Evaluation of the Revised Sampling Plan - Paul B. McMahon, Internal Revenue Service ............... 212

Improving the Stratification of the Bank and Corporation Sample - Lawrence Gilbert, State of California Franchise Tax Board ............... 218

A Sampling Standard Undergoes Development: Reflections on ASTM-E141-91 - C.H. Proctor, North Carolina State University ............... 224

 

IV Response Errors in Surveys
Chair: Judith Lessler, Battelle

Comparability Between Items Reported on the Death Certificate and Informants on the 1993 National Mortality Followback Survey - Susan G. Queen, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 227

Reconciling Respondent Reports and Medicare Claims for National Estimates of Hospital Use - Sally C. Stearns, Kevin Hayes, and Gary G. Koch, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Mary Grace Kovar, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 232

Survey Research and Response Bias - Anne G. Scott and Lee Sechrest, University of Arizona ............... 238

Unemployment Rates, Self Selection, and the CPS Reinterview Program: Further Analyses - Judith M. Tanur and Jung-Kyu Lee, State University of New York at Stony Brook ............... 244

Data Quality in the 1990 Census - The Content Reinterview Survey - Kathryn F. Thomas and Tamara L. Dingbaum, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 250

 

V. Small Area Estimation in U.S. Federal Programs
Organizer: Wesley L. Schaible, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Chair: Maria E. Gonzalez, Office of Management and Budget

Estimation of Median Income for 4-Person Families by State - Robert E. Fay and Charles T. Nelson, U.S. Bureau of the Census; Leon Litow, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ............... 256

 

VI. Record Linkages and Related Issues
Chair: Steven G. Heeringa, University of Michigan

Enriching One Sample While Improving Another: Linking Differentially Stratified Samples of Documents Filed by Exempt Organizations - James M. Harte and Cecelia H. Hilgert, Internal Revenue Service ............... 262

The Protection of Confidential Data Stored in a Sequential Access Statistical Database - E. Noren and S. Keller-McNulty, Kansas State University ............... 268

Improved Decision Rules in the Fellegi-Sunter Model of Record Linkage - William E. Winkler, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 274

1992 Census of Agriculture Frame Development and Record Linkage - Tommy W. Gaulden, Jane D. Sandusky and Elizabeth Ann Vacca, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 280

Using Response Agreement to Evaluate Suspect Links on a Longitudinal Survey - Robert M. Bell, RAND ............... 286

 

VII. A Potential Application of Single and Multiple Imputation Techniques in a National Health Survey
Chair/Organizer: Meena Khare, National Center for Health Statistics

Serial Imputation of NHANES III With Mixed Regression and Hot-Deck Techniques - Trena M. Ezzati -Rice and Meena Khare, National Center for Health Statistics; Mansour Fahimi and David Judkins, Westat, Inc. ............... 292

Multiple Imputation of NHANES III - Meena Khare, National Center for Health Statistics; Roderick J. A. Little, University of Michigan; Donald B. Rubin, Harvard University; Joseph L. Schafer, Pennsylvania State University ............... 297

A Comparison of Imputation Techniques in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey - Trena M. Ezzati -Rice and Meena Khare, National Center for Health Statistics; Donald B. Rubin, Harvard University; Roderick J. A. Little, University of Michigan; Joseph L. Schafer, Pennsylvania State University ............... 303

Discussion - Ralph E. Folsom, Research Triangle Institute ............... 309

 

VIII. Quality Aspects of Reporting, Coding and Keying Survey Data
Chair: Mary Batcher, Internal Revenue Service

Quality of Data Keying for Major Operations of the 1990 Census - Kent Wurdeman, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 312

Effects of a Cognitive Interviewing Approach on Response Quality in a Pretest for the SIPP - Kent H. Marquis, Jeffrey C. Moore and Karen Bogen, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 318

Cognitive Aspects of Reporting Cancer Prevention Examinations and Tests - Seymour Sudman, Richard Warnecke, Timothy Johnson and Diane O'Rourke, University of Illinois; Andrew M. Davis, RUSH-Anchor HMO; Jared B. Jobe, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 324

Effect of Interviewer and Respondent Characteristics on Reporting of Chronic Conditions - W. Sherman Edwards, Westat, Inc.; Marc L. Berk, Project HOPE ............... 330

Fabrication During the 1990 Nonresponse Followup Operation - G. Machell Kindred and Jimmie B. Scott, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 335

 

IX. Contributions to Sampling Theory
Chair: Susan Hinkins, Internal Revenue Service

Some Theorems Relating Poststratification and Sample Configuration - Dhiren Ghosh, Statistical Consultant; Andrew Vogt, Georgetown University ............... 341

Optimizing Sample Allocation for Multiple Response Variables - M.A. Rahim and S. Curie, Statistics Canada ............... 346

X. Small Area and Composite Estimation
Chair:
David Judkins, Westat, Inc.

Small Area Estimation - Ayah E. Johnson, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 352

Times Series Models for State Labor Force Estimates - Thomas D. Evans, Richard B. Tiller and Tamara Sue Zimmerman, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 358

Alternative Options for State Level Estimates in the National Medical Expenditure Survey - Steven B. Cohen and Jill J. Braden, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 364

 

XI. Advances in Questionnaire Design
Chair:
Karin Clissold, University of Michigan

Survey Procedures for Conducting Cognitive Interviews to Pretest Questionnaires: A Review of Theory and Practice - Johnny Blair and Stanley Presser, University of Maryland ............... 370

A Process Model to Guide Questionnaire Forms Redesign - Deborah Stone and Marie van Melis-Wright, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; Anita Wright, American Institutes for Research ............... 376

Collecting Information from Teenagers: Experiences from the Cognitive Lab - Barbara J. Stussman, Gordon B. Willis, and Karen F. Allen, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 382

Analysis of Classification Decisions on the Consumer Expenditure Survey - David Cantor and Kerry Levin, Westat, Inc.; Leslie Miller and Paul Hsen, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 386

Coding of Respondent Behaviour by Interviewers to Test Questionnaire Wording - M.J. Burgess and D. Paton, Statistics Canada ............... 392

 

XII. The 1991 BLS Consumer Expenditure Diary Experiment
Organizer: Clyde Tucker, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Chair: Sioux Groves, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Part-Set Cuing in Diary Surveys - Adriana R. Silberstein, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 398

The Efficacy of Diary Assessments: Using Diary Assessments to Evaluate Respondents' Level of Performance on Alternative Diary Forms - Leslie A. Miller and Sharon Krieger, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 404

The Effects of Format Changes on Reporting in the 1991 Consumer Expenditure Diary Survey - Clyde Tucker, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 410

 

XIII. Evaluating and Improving Survey Measurement
Chair: Steven B. Cohen, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research

Labor Force Measurements for the Census 2000 - Philip M. Hauser, University of Chicago; Leo J. Shapiro, Leo J. Shapiro & Associates ............... 416

Psychological Variables Associated with Respondents' Sensitivity to the 'Income Question' and a Measure of Their Willingness to Give Financial Information on Government Surveys - Marie van Melis-Wright, Deborah Stone and Maxwell Miller, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 422

SIPP Recall Length Decision: An Alternative to Experimentation - Hertz Huang, Gary Shapiro and Kathleen Short, U.S. Bureau of the Census; Kevin Cooper, University of Michigan ............... 428

 

XIV. Imputation of Item Missing Data
Chair: Lorraine Porcellini, Temple University

Cross-Sectional Imputation and Longitudinal Editing Procedures in the Survey of Income and Program Participation - Steven G. Pennell and James M. Lepkowski, University of Michigan ............... 434

An Assessment of Alternative Data Replacement Techniques - Nancy A. Mathiowetz, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 440

Comparison of Methods for Imputing Missing Responses in an Establishment Survey - Jill M. Montaquila and Chester H. Ponikowski, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 446

Alternative Imputation Procedures for Item Non-response from New Establishments in the Universe - Sandra A. West, Diem -Tran Kratzke, and Kenneth W. Robertson, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 452

The Imputation of Compositional Data - David Judkins, Katie A. Hubbell, and Amy M. England, Westat, Inc. ............... 458

Imputation for the Income and Assets Module of the Medicare Current Beneficiaries Survey (MCBS) - Marianne Winglee, Lana Ryaboy, and David Judkins, Westat, Inc. ............... 463

 

XV. Year 2000 Census Design Options Research
Chair/Organizer: Henry F. Woltman, U.S. Bureau of the Census

Sampling and Estimation for the Homeless Population - Eric Schindler and Alfredo Navarro, U.S. Bureau of the Census; Richard Griffin, Chilton Research Services ............... 468

Influence of an Invitation to Answer by Telephone on Response to Census Questionnaires - Jon Clark and Kirsten West, U.S. Bureau of the Census; Don Dillman ,Washington State University ............... 474

Matrix Sampling Designs for the Year 2000 Census - Alfredo Navarro, U. S. Bureau of the Census; Richard Griffin, Chilton Research Services ............... 480

A Continuous Measurement Alternative for the U.S. Census - Charles H. Alexander, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 486

Sampling for the Count in a Census - Cary T. Isaki, Julie H. Tsay and Yves Thibaudeau, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 492

 

XVI. Searching for Bias in Survey Data
Chair: Kevin Cooper, U.S. Bureau of the Census

Improving Models to Estimate Bias in Payroll Employment Estimates - George Stamas, Diem-Tran Kratzke, and Kirk Mueller, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 498

National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP): Nonresponse Study - Douglas Wright and Michael P. Cohen, National Center for Education Statistics ............... 504

Recall Bias in the National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife Associated Recreation - Lawrence S. Cahoon, Caroline A. Riker and Thomas F. Moore, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 508

 

XVII. Understanding, Reducing and Compensating for Nonresponse
Chair: Theresa J. DeMaio, U.S. Bureau of the Census

Multivariate Analysis of Nonresponse in Personal Visit Surveys - Robert M. Groves and Mick P. Couper, University of Michigan ............... 514

Nonresponse Adjustment in a Longitudinal Survey of African Americans - Monica L. Wolford and Myriam Torres, University of Michigan ............... 520

Item Nonresponse of Medical Provider Utilization Data in the NMES Institutional Survey - D.E.B. Potter and Jill J. Braden, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 526

Multi-Modality Surveys: Assessing the Cost Effectiveness of Bias Reduction - Michael P. Battaglia and Robert J. Schmitz, Abt Associates ............... 532

Construction of Adjustment Cells Based on Surrogate Items or Estimated Response Propensities - I.S. Yansaneh, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; JL. Eltinge, Texas A&M University ............... 538

 

XVIII. Estimation Problems in Complex Surveys
Chair/Organizer: John G. Kovar, Statistics Canada

Balanced Repeated Replication - Jun Shao, University of Ottawa ............... 544

Estimating Some Measures of Income Inequality from Survey Data: An Application of the Estimating Equation Approach - David A. Binder and Milorad S. Kovacevic, Statistics Canada ............... 550

Bayesian Versus Frequentist Measures of Uncertainty for Small Area Estimators - A.C. Singh and D.M. Stukel, Statistics Canada; D. Pfeffermann, Hebrew University ............... 556

Discussion - J.N.K. Rao, Carleton University ............... 562

 

XIX. Advances in Pretesting
Chair:
Robert M. Groves, University of Michigan

Comparing the Think Aloud Interviewing Technique with Standard Interviewing in the Redesign of a Dietary Recall Questionnaire - Wendy L. Davis and Theresa J. DeMaio, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 565

The Use of Anthropological Interviewing Methods in Survey Research Pretesting - Dawn R. Von Thurn and Jeffrey C. Moore, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 571

Living Situation Survey: Methods for Pretesting Rostering Techniques - Barbara H. Forsyth and James F. Kennedy, Research Triangle Institute ............... 577

Discussion - Floyd J. Fowler, Jr., University of Massachusetts at Boston ............... 583

 

Volume II
XX. Analysis of Survey Data
Chair: Steven G. Pennell, University of Michigan

Cognitive Aspects of Designing Statistical Maps - Monroe Sirken, Douglas Herrmann and Andrew A. White, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 586

Comparing Advance and Final Estimates: 1990 SOI Corporate Sample - John Czajka, Mathematica Policy Research Inc.; Susan Hinkins, Internal Revenue Service ............... 592

The Family that Pays Together: Introducing the Tax Family Concept, with Preliminary Findings - John L. Czajka and Allen L. Schirm, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. ............... 597

Use of Discriminant Analysis to Classify People with Mental Disabilities - Eric R. Langlet, Statistics Canada ............... 603

Estimation and Analysis of Desired Family Size with WFS Data - Cam-Loi Huynh, University of Manitoba ............... 609

 

XXI. On Measuring Undercount in the Decennial Census
Chair: Annie Lo, Westat, Inc.

Census Coverage Measurement Methodology Research: Past and Present - Mary H. Mulry, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 617

Results from the 1990 Search/Match Operation - Susan C. Wajer, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 623

Analysis of Census Omissions: Preliminary Results - Christopher L. Moriarity, National Center for Health Statistics; Danny R. Childers, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 629

Coverage of Housing in the 1990 Decennial Census - Danny R. Childers, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 635

A Multivariate Analysis of the Census Omission of Hispanics and Non-Hispanic Whites, Blacks, Asians and American Indians: Evidence from Small Area Ethnographic Studies - Manuel de la Puente, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 641

 

XXII. Statistical Software for Complex Surveys
Chair/Organizer: Karol P. Krotki, Temple University

Sampling Errors in the Integrated System for Survey Analysis (ISSA) - Guillermo Rojas and Alfredo Aliaga, Macro International ............... 647

Recent Developments in PC CARP - William J. Kennedy, Ouhong Wang and Wayne A. Fuller, Iowa State University ............... 654

Recent Developments and Future Plans for SUDAAN - Babubhai V. Shah and Beth G. Barnwell, Research Triangle Institute ............... 657

GES: An Estimation System in Development at Statistics Canada - Hyunshik Lee, Mike Hidiroglou and Victor Estevao, Statistics Canada ............... 662

 

XXIII. Schools and Staffing Survey: Recent Research
Chair: Paul D. Planchon, National Center for Education Statistics

Generalized Variance Functions for the Schools and Staffing Surveys - Sameena Salvucci, Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc.; Glenn Galfond, Price Waterhouse; Steven Kaufman, National Center for Education Statistics ............... 669

A Bootstrap Variance Estimator for the Schools and Staffing Survey - Steven Kaufman, National Center for Education Statistics ............... 675

Adjusting for Nonresponse Bias of Correlated Items Using Logistic Regression - Pao-Sheng Shen, and Robin Fisher, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 681

Comparisons of School Locale Setting: Self-Reported Versus Assigned - Frank Johnson, National Center for Education Statistics ............... 686

The Accuracy of Teachers' Self-Reports on their Postsecondary Education - Bradford Chaney, Westat, Inc. ............... 692

Characteristics of Nonrespondents to the 1990-91 Schools and Staffing Survey - Wray Smith and Ramal Moonesinghe, Synectics for Management Decisions, Inc.; Kerry Gruber, National Center for Education Statistics ............... 698

 

XXIV. Developments in Household Surveys
Organizer: J. Douglas Drew, Statistics Canada
Chair: Michael L. Sheridan, Statistics Canada

1990 Household Sample Redesign - Preston Jay Waite, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 704

Results from the Current Population Survey CATI Phase-in Project - Harland H. Shoemaker, Jr., U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 710

Research Studies for the Labour Force Survey Sample Redesign - M.P. Singh, J. Gambino and N. Laniel, Statistics Canada ............... 715

Market Testing in British Government Household Surveys - Robert Barnes, OPCS-UK ............... 721

 

XXV. Measurement Error in Surveys: Mode Effects
Chair:
John L. Czajka, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.

Short-Term Changes to the CPS Composite Estimator in January 1994 - Patrick J. Cantwell and Lawrence R. Ernst, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 724

Mode Effects in a Survey of Medicare Prostate Surgery Patients - Floyd J. Fowler, Jr., Anthony M. Roman and Zhu Xiao Di, University of Massachusetts at Boston ............... 730

Data Quality Issues in a Multi-Mode Census: Results from the Mail and Telephone Mode Test (MTMT) - Nancy Bates, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 736

Results from the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) CATI Experiment - Miriam D. Rosenthal and David L. Hubble, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 742

Long Term Retention of Sample Members Under Automated Self-Response Data Collection - Richard J. Rosen, Richard L. Clayton and Lynda L. Wolf, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 748

New Approaches to Controlling Response Error in Establishment Universe and Sample Data - George S. Werking, Patricia M. Getz and Richard L. Clayton, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 753

 

XXVI. Aspects of Weighting Complex Samples
Chair: Dhiren Ghosh, Statistical Consultant

The Effect of Weight Trimming on Nonlinear Survey Estimates - Frank J. Potter, Research Triangle Institute ............... 758

Models for Smoothing Post-Stratification Weights - Laura C. Lazzeroni, University of California at Los Angeles; Roderick J.A. Little, University of Michigan ............... 764

Comparison of Alternative Family Weighting Methods for the National Health Interview Survey - Michael Ikeda, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 770

Regression Weighting for Multiphase Forest Service Samples - F. Jay Breidt and Wayne A. Fuller, Iowa State University ............... 776

The Role of Weights in Multivariate Analyses of the NCVS - Sharon Lohr, Arizona State University; Joanna Liu, Unisys Corporation ............... 781

 

XXVII. Data Quality Issues in Research and Sample Design
Chair: Kathryn F. Thomas, U.S. Bureau of the Census

Quality Profile for the American Housing Survey - Rameswar P. Chakrabarty, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 786

The Biasing Effects of Scale-Checking Styles on Response to a Likert Scale - Hershey H. Friedman, Brooklyn College, CUNY; Paul J. Herskovitz, College of Staten Island, CUNY; Simcha Pollack, St. John's University ............... 792

Use of Multiple Comparison Procedures in the Design and Analysis of Year 2000 Census Research Studies - Henry F. Woltman, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 796

 

XXVIII. Variance Estimation for Complex Surveys: I
Chair: Alan H. Dorfman, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Variance Estimation in the CPS Overlap Test - Robin Fisher and Jenny Thompson, U.S. Bureau of the Census; Edwin Robison and Michael Welch, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 802

Estimation of Variance Components for the U.S. Consumer Price Index via Gibbs Sampling - Robert M. Baskin, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 808

Variances for Models Using 'Aged' Data - John Paul Sommers, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 814

Components of Variance and Nonresponse Adjustment for the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey - David Judkins and Annie Lo, Westat, Inc. ............... 820

1992 Census of Agriculture Variance Estimation - Richard Griffiths, David Hornick, Inez Chen, and Tony Eleftherakis, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 826

 

XIX. Nonresponse and Imputation Problems
Chair: Mick P. Couper, U.S. Bureau of the Census

Self-Proxy Response Status and Quality of Cigarette-Related Information - Donna Eisenhower, John Hail and Randy Brown, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. ............... 832

Survey Topic Involvement and Nonresponse Bias - Brian A. Kojetin, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; Eugene Borgida and Mark Snyder, University of Minnesota ............... 838

Nonresponse Bias from a Survey of Hospices and Home Health Agencies - Esther Hing, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 844

Nonresponse Prompting Behavior in a Monthly Establishment Survey - Richard L. Clayton, Richard J. Rosen and Thomas B. Rubino, Jr., U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 850

Imputing Price as Opposed to Revenue in the EIA-782 Petroleum Survey - Pedro J. Saavedra and Michael Errecart, Macro International, Inc.; Paula Weir, U.S. Energy Information Agency ............... 855

 

XXX. Variance Estimation for Complex Sample Surveys: II
Chair: Tommy W Gaulden, U.S. Bureau of the Census

Generalized Variance Functions for the Current Employment Statistics Survey - Steve Woodruff, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 860

Quantile Variance Estimators in Complex Surveys - Alan Dorfinan and Richard Valliant, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 866

A Bootstrap Strategy for Enhancing the Confidence Interval Estimation of Small Samples - Chih-Chin Ho, Internal Revenue Service ............... 872

 

XXXI. Analysis of Panel Survey Data
Chair: Robert M. Bell, The RAND Corporation

Survival Analysis for the Survey of Income and Program Participation - I-li Lu and Lynn Weidman, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 877

A Study of Panel Effects in Random Digit Dialing (RDD) Studies - M. Fahimi, D. Maklan, D. Morganstein and M. Wilson, Westat, Inc. ............... 883

Change over Time: Observational State, Missing Data, and Repeated Measures in the Grade of Membership Modell - Max A. Woodbury, Larry S. Corder, and Kenneth G. Manton, Duke University ............... 888

Estimating Time Series Models for Emergency Room Episodes Involving Drugs - Charles K. Fairchild and Richard E. Gruberg, CSR, Incorporated; Arthur L. Hughes, National Institute on Drug Abuse ............... 892

Membership in a Linked Panel of Individual Tax Returns: Review and Results - Susan C. Hostetter, Internal Revenue Service ............... 898

 

Contributed Papers - Poster Sessions

Variability in the Sampling Weights in the National Health Interview Survey-Causes, Implications, and Strategies - Steven L. Botman, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 904

A Regression Analysis of NCHS Longitudinal Data - Jai W. Choi, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 910

Moving Beyond Nonmetropolitan as a Definition of Rural America - Jill J. Braden and Karen Beauregard, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 915

Markov Models for Longitudinal Data from Complex Samples - Laurel A. Beckett, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's; Dwight B. Brock, National Institute on Aging; Paul A. Scherr, Centers for Disease Control; Carlos Mendes de Leon, Yale University ............... 921

 

Paper Presented at the1992 Joint Statistical Meetings
August 9-13, 1992
Boston, Massachusetts

Comparision of Traditional and Modified Waksberg - Charlene Smith and Emma L. Frazier, Centers for Disease Control ............... 926

 

Papers Presented at the 1993 ASA Winter Conference
January 3-5,
1993
Fort Lauderdale, Florida

Contributed Papers by Topic

I. Approaches to Improving Data Analysis
Chair: Stephanie Shipp, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

Standard Errors of Usual Intake Quantiles - Anthony B. An, Alicia L. Carriquiry and Wayne A. Fuller, Iowa State University ............... 932

 

II. The BLS Intrahousehold Communications Project
Chair: Catheryn S. Dippo, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

The Intrahousehold Communications Study: A Typology of Family Cohesion - Leslie A. Miller and Clyde Tucker, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 936

The Intrahousehold Communications Study: Family Cohesion and the Level of Knowledge about Expenses - Clyde Tucker and Leslie Miller, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 942

Factors Associated With Proxy Knowledge of Employment-Related Information - Paul A. Mullin, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; Bruce E. Tonn, Oak Ridge National Laboratory ............... 948

 

III. Analysis of Family-Level Data in a National Panel Survey, the 1987 National Medical Expenditure Survey
Chair: Steven B. Cohen, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research

Family Unit Constructs, Dynamics, and Analysis in the Household Component of the NMES - Barbara Lepidus Carlson, Steven B. Cohen and Ayah E. Johnson, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 954

 

IV. Questionnaire Protocols, Respondent Differences, and the Effects of Sample Design on Estimates
Chair: Clyde Tucker, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

An Experimental Comparision of Alternative 24-Hour Diet Recall Questionnaire Protocols for Children - Karin A. Mack, Johnny Blair and Stanley Presser, University of Maryland ............... 960

The Impact of Sample Design on Estimates of Demographic Behavior - Joan R. Kahn, Hsiao-ye Yi and Johnny Blair, University of Maryland ............... 965

 

Papers Presented at the 48th Annual Conference of the American Association for Public Opinion Research
May 20-23, 1993
St. Charles, Illinois

The Navajo/Hopi Land Dispute and the Boundaries of Methodology - Frederic I. Solop, Northern Arizona University ............... 971

Exit Polling Hispanic Voters in Texas and California: 1984-92 - Robert R. Brischetto, Southwest Voter Research Institute; Karol P. Krotki, Temple University ............... 976

A Heirarchy of List-Assisted Stratified Telephone Sample Design Options - Clyde Tucker, and Robert J. Casady, U.S Bureau of Labor Statistics; James Lepkowski, University of Michigan ............... 982

Is Value Added by Adjusting for Duplicates in a Population Frame? - Jason S. Lee, U.S. General Accounting Office ............... 988

Improving Survey Response and Coverage Rates Through Multi Modality Surveys - Michael P. Battaglia and Andrea Hassol, Abt Associates, Inc. ............... 993

Integrating Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in a Study of Knowledge About the Holocaust - Katherine Bischoping, York University ............... 999

Conducting Non-Traditional Data Collection: Taking Videotaped Child Development Instruments Out of the Lab and Into the Field - Susan Sprachman and George J. Carcagno, Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.; Geoff Good,nan, Columbia University ............... 1004

Question Answering Strategies in Agricultural Surveys - Jaki S. Stanley, National Agricultural Statistics Service and Catholic University of America ............... 1010

Enhancing Compliance with Record-Keeping Behavior in a Household Survey - Maria Elena Sanchez, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research ............... 1015

Research on the Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals - Theresa J. DeMaio, Susan Ciochetto and Wendy L. Davis, U.S. Bureau of theCensus ............... 1021

Preliminary Field Results of an Alternative Measurement Design for the Survey of Income and Program Participation - Karen Bogen, Nola G. Krasko, Jeffrey C. Moore and Kent H. Marquis, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 1027

Problems with Question Wording by Age of Respondent - Sandra L. Edwards, University of Utah ............... 1032

Increasing Physician Survey Response Rates Without Biasing Survey Results - Lorayn Olson, Mindy Schneiderman and Ruth V. Armstrong, American Medical Association ............... 1036

Mode Effects of Nonresponse Follow-up in an Establishment Setting - Young Chun, Richard Devens, Gordon Mikkelson, and James Yule, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 1042

Understanding the Standardized/Non-Standaidized Interviewing Controversy - Paul Beatty, University of Michigan ............... 1048

NOpinion and Linkage: The Relationship of Survey Non-Attitudes to Public Opinion's Effect on Govemment Policy - Howard Eaton, Jr., Yale University ............... 1054

How the Memorability of Events Affects Frequency Judgments - Frederick Conrad and Erin Cashman, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics; Norman Brown, University of Alberta ............... 1058

The Effect of Regularity on the Accuracy of Reporting of Medical Tests - Diane O'Rourke, Timothy Johnson, Seymour Sudman and Richard Warnecke, University of Illinois; Jared B. Jobe, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 1064

The Impact of Callbacks on Survey Estimates in an Annual RDD Survey - Daniel M. Merkle, D.S. Howard and Associates; Sandra L. Bauman and Paul J. Lavrakas, Northwestern University ............... 1070

Discussion - Jason S. Lee, U.S. General Accounting Office ............... 1076

New CASIC Technologies at the U.S. Census Bureau - Martin V. Appel and William L. Nicholls II, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 1079

Field Coding Complex Data in CAPI: An Investigation of the Use of Database Search Procedures to Identify and Code Medical Providers in a Household Survey - Maria Elena Sanchez, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research; Carmen J. Vincent, Westat, Inc. ............... 1085

Application of Paired Comparison Methodology in Measuring Canadians' Forest Values - Keith Neuman, Corporate Research Associates; Barry G. Watson, Environics Research Group, Limited ............... 1091

The Intrahousehold Communications Study: Estimating the Accuracy of Proxy Responses at the Dyadic Level - Brian A. Kojetin and Leslie A. Miller, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 1095

Effects of Incentives in a Multi-Modal Survey of Elites: Findings from the National Study of Postsecondary Faculty - Sameer Abraham and Bob Johnson, National Opinion Research Center ............... 1101

The Last-Birthday Selection Method & Within-Unit Coverage Problems - Paul J. Lavrakas and Sandra L. Bauman, Northwestern University; Daniel M. Merkle, D.S. Howard & Associates ............... 1107

Sampling Individuals Within Households in Telephone Surveys - Gosta Forsman, University of Linkoping ............... 1113

Within-Household Selection: Is Anybody Listening? - Kathleen Carr and Joan Hertvik, Ohio State University ............... 1119

Psychological Variables Associated with Respondents' Sensitivity to Income Questions - A Preliminary Analysis - Marie van Melis-Wright and Deborah Stone, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics ............... 1124

A Post-Election Bandwagon Effect? - Comparing National Exit Poll Data with a General Population Survey - Robert H. Prisuta, American Association of Retired Persons ............... 1130

Some Experiments on Using a Projective Technique to Measure Stereotypes and Compare Them Cross-Culturally - G. Ray Funkhouser, National University of Singapore ............... 1136

Before the Pretest: Question Development Strategies - Steven Blixt and Jennifer Dykeina, University of Michigan ............... 1142

Utilizing Focus Groups in the Final Stages of Questionnaire Design - Susan Schechter, Deborah Trunzo and P. Ellen Parsons, National Center for Health Statistics ............... 1148

Predictions of the Bush-Clinton-Perot Presidential Race from the Press - David P. Fan, University of Minnesota ............... 1154

Who Misled Whom? The Polls and the Voters in the 1992 British Election - Roger Jowell, Barry Hedges, Peter Lynn, Graham Farrant, and Anthony Heath, Social and Community Planning Research ............... 1160

Religion and Support for Democracy in the Old and New Bundeslander - Allan L. McCutcheon, University of Delaware ............... 1166

A Meta-Analysis of Soviet Survey Research Methods - Irina V. McKeehan, Columbia University ............... 1172

Evaluating Numeric and Verbal Labels for Response Scales - Colm A. O'Muircheartaigh, George D. Gaskell and Daniel B. Wright, London School of Economics ............... 1178

An Analysis of Response Patterns to the Ten-Point Scalometer - Tom W. Smith, National Opinion Research Center ............... 1183

Measuring Interviewer Effects on Self-Reports from Homeless Persons - Timothy P. Johnson and Jenniffer A. Parsons, University of Illinois ............... 1189

Gender and Response Effects in a Pre-Election Poll: Illinois 1992 - Joan M. Phillips, University of Illinois; Richard Schuldt, Sangamon State University ............... 1195

Group Gender Composition Effects in Gender-Role Attitude Measurement: Two Failures to Replicate - Joel M. Savell, U.S. Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences ............... 1201

He Said/She Said. Vote Choice in the 1992 Presidential Election - Respondent/Interviewer Gender Interaction Effects in Pre-Election Polling - Janice Ballou, Rutgers University ............... 1205

Public Opinion and the 1992 Presidential Debates: Upsetting and Reinforcing Predispositions - Ken Winneg and Kristen L. Conrad, Chilton Research Services ............... 1210

Predictions of Consumer Confidence/Sentiment from the Press - David P. Fan, University of Minnesota ............... 1216

Expenditure Questions that Conform to Consumption Patterns - Theodore Downes-Le Guin, RAND; Sidistinah Achmad, University of Indonesia ............... 1222

Results from a National Survey of American Economic Literacy - William B. Walstad, University of Nebraska; Max Larsen, The Gallup Organization ............... 1226

Pre-Election Polls and Their Positive Roles in the Construction of Electoral Meaning - Xinshu Zhao and Glen L. Bleske,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ............... 1231

The Non-Solicitation Statement: A Methodological Consideration for Survey Introductions - William J. Gonzenbach and Patrick Jablonski, University of Alabama ............... 1236

The Motivational Basis of Attendance at Focus Groups and its Effect on Participant Attitudes - Peter Tuckel, Hunter College; Elaine Leppo and Barbara Kaplan, In Vision Inc. ............... 1241

Higher Education and TQM: Needs, Caveats, and Opportunities for 'Employee Surveys' - Walton H. Owens, Jr., Clemson University ............... 1247

Research on the Effectiveness of Olympic Advertising - Horst Stipp, National Broadcasting Company, Inc. ............... 1251

Response Rates and Response Content in Mail vs. Face-to-Face Surveys - Maria Krysan, Howard Schuman, Lesli Jo Scott, and Paul Beatty, University of Michigan ............... 1256

Research on Sources of Undercoverage Within Households - Elizabeth Martin and Manuel de la Puente, U.S. Bureau of the Census ............... 1262

A New Method of Predicting Voting Behavior - Janet A. Hoek and Phillp I. Gendall, Massey University ............... 1268

 

Poster Session

CAPI Training: Where Do We Go From Here? - Mark S. Wojcik and Edwin Hunt, National Opinion Research Center ............... 1274

Quality Management Approach to Keystroke Verification - Robert F. Bailey, Robert Miller and Howard Speizer, National Opinion Research Center ............... 1280

Evaluating Dual Frame Samples and Advance Letters as a Means of Increasing Response Rates - Michael W. Traugott and Kenneth Goldstein, University of Michigan ............... 1284