References

Attachment 9 References .docx

Research to support the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS)

References

OMB: 1121-0325

Document [docx]
Download: docx | pdf

References



Belli, R.F., Lee, E.H., Stafford, F.P., Chou, C. (2004). “Calendar and question-list survey methods: Association between interviewer behaviors and data quality.” Journal of Official Statistics, 20(2), 185-218.

Bellezza, F.S. and Hartwell, T.C. (1981) “Cuing subjective units.” The Journal of Psychology: Interdisciplinary and Applied, 107 (2), 209-218.

Bradburn, N.M., Sudman, S. and Associates, (1979). Improving interview method and questionnaire design. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Bushery, J. M. (1981). “Recall biases for different reference periods in the National Crime Survey.” Proceedings of the American Statistical Association, (pp. 238-243).

Cannell, C.F., Oksenberg, L. & Converse, J.M. (1977). Experiments in interviewing techniques: Field experiments in health reporting: 1971-1977. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Services Research.

Cowan, C.D., Murphy, L.R., & Wiener, J. (1978). “Effects of supplemental questions on victimization estimates from the National Crime Survey.” Proceedings of the American Statistical Association, (pp. 277-282).

Dashen, M. & Fricker, S. (2001). “Understanding the cognitive processes of open-ended categorical questions and their effects on data quality.” Journal of Official Statistics, 17 (4), 457-477.


Freedman, D., Thornton, A., Camburn, D., Alwyn, D., & Young-DeMarco, L. (1988). “The life history calendar: A technique for collecting retrospective data.” Sociological Methodology, 18, 37-68.


Hudson, R.L. and Davis, J.L. (1972). “The effect of intralist cues, extralist cues, and category names on categorized recall. Psychonomic Science, 29, 71-75.


Klaus, Patsy. (2007). National Crime Victimization Survey: Crime and the Nation’s Households, 2005. Bureau of Justice Data Brief. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice.

Lynch, P.L. (2006). Problems and promise of victimization surveys for cross-national research. Crime and Justice, 34, 229-287.


Schuman, H. & Presser, S., (1981) Questions and answers in attitude surveys: Experiments on question from, wording and context. Orlando: Academic Press.

Smith, T. W. (1990). “Trends in voluntary group membership: Comments on Baumgartner and Walker.” American Journal of Political Science, 34, 646-661.

Sudman, S., Bradburn, N.M. & Schwartz, N. (1996). Thinking about answers: The application of cognitive process to survey methodology. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

Taylor, B.M. and M.R. Rand. (1995). “The National Crime Victimization Survey redesign: New understandings of victimization dynamics and measurement.” Paper presented at the annual meeting of the ASA, August, Orlando, FL.

Tourangeau, R., and Rasinski, K. (1988) “Cognitive processes underlying context effects in attitude measurement.” Psychological Bulletin. 103, 299-314.

Tourangeau, R., Rips L.J., and Rasinski, K., (2000). The psychology of survey response. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.

Tulving, E. & Pearlstone, Z. (1966). “Availability versus accessibility of information in memory for words. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 5 (4), 381-391.


File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorFeel Good Inc.
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-01-31

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy