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Adaptive mixed-mode design WP1

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Presentation on theme: "Adaptive mixed-mode design WP1"— Presentation transcript:

1 Adaptive mixed-mode design WP1
ROME April 11th | 12th MIMOD Mixed-Mode Designs for Social Surveys FINAL WORKSHOP Adaptive mixed-mode design WP1 Barry Schouten Statistics Netherlands (CBS)

2 Adaptive mixed-mode survey design (ASD)
Adaptive survey design optimizes quality-cost trade-offs by differentiating effort to different (relevant) population strata. In MIMOD, differentiation of effort is focussed at the choice of mode strategy per population stratum. Objectives of WP1 mixed-mode ASD: Make an inventory of ASD implementations in ESS countries; Structure the decisions/steps towards an mixed-mode ASD; Illustrate using two case studies; MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

3 WP1 MIMOD survey Findings from WP1 survey:
Mixed-mode ASD implemented only at Stat Netherlands; ASD is a relatively unknown strategy to balance quality and costs. Eight countries indicated in survey they were unsure whether ASD is applied; Potential reasons: Implementation demands flexible case management system across modes; Relatively weak available auxiliary data to stratify the population; Mostly theoretical approach without many success stories; MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

4 ASD steps to implementation
Key ingredients of ASD: Explicit quality and costs metrics; Relevant auxiliary data; Design features/interventions In general: All possible elements of data collection strategy; In MIMOD: Modes; Optimization strategy, e.g. Case prioritization; Mathematical optimization; Stopping rules based on quota MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

5 ASD steps to implementation – checklist
Identify priorities; Identify major risks: Consider risk of incomparability in time; Consider risk of incomparability between subgroups; Consider risk of budget overrun and heavy interviewer workloads in follow-up modes; Define quality and cost indicators; Consider nonresponse indicators; Consider measurement error indicators; Consider cost indicators; Define decision rules from: Trial-and-error; Case prioritization; Quota; Mathematical optimization; Modify the survey design and monitor the outcomes; Develop a dashboard for survey errors; Develop a dashboard for survey costs; Compute estimates; Document; MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

6 ASD case study – Health Survey/EHIS – priorities and risks
Key design feature: yes/no F2F follow-up to web nonrespondents Main priorities: Acceptable and similar response rates among relevant population subgroups Sufficient precision on annual survey estimates Costs satisfying a specified budget Main risks: Incomparability in time Unpredictable CAPI workload due to varying monthly and annual web response rate Incomparability between different population subgroups of interest MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

7 ASD case study – Health Survey/EHIS – quality and costs
Objective: Maximize coefficient of variation (CV) of response propensities (combines R-indicator and response rate) Response propensities modelled by age, income, urbanization, type of household, ethnicity Constraints: A minimum annual total number of about 9500 respondents was requested An upper limit of 8000 was imposed to the number of nonrespondents that are sent to CAPI, as a proxy for a budget constraint An upper limit of persons was set to the sample size TO DO: Inclusion of constraint on mode-specific measurement bias MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

8 ASD case study – Health Survey/EHIS – optimization
Stratification based on classification tree of web response MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

9 ASD case study – Health Survey/EHIS – optimization
Optimal allocation probabilities of web nonrespondents to F2F follow-up were determined based on mathematical optimization. Per month allocation probabilities are rescaled to guarantee a fixed F2F workload. CV uniform design = 0.158 CV adaptive design = 0.116 Stratum RR web Alloc F2F RR F2F RR tot 1 42.6 56,4 48.5 58.1 2 24.8 95.1 47.1 56.4 3 37.6 71.4 42.3 57.1 4 23.1 100.0 25.4 5 39.3 43.5 64.8 57.2 6 36.3 66.5 47.6 57.4 7 19.3 30.8 44.4 8 20.2 38.7 52.3 9 28.9 65.8 58.3 57.0 total 35.9 71.5 42.5 55.7 MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019

10 Concluding remarks Adaptive mixed-mode survey design offers a flexible way to balance quality and budget Holds true especially in sequential designs with more expensive (interviewer) modes as optional. Further within mode differentiation (timing and number of calls/visits) is possible. However: Account of both representation and measurement is crucial; A flexible case management system and monitoring is required; Future: May be combined with re-interview designs (WP2) May be combined with sensor measurements/data (WP5) MIMOD project - Mixed-Mode Designs in Social Surveys Rome, April 2019


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