Matthias Schonlau, Mick P. Couper
Web surveys can be conducted relatively fast and at relatively low cost. However, Web surveys are often conducted with nonprobability samples and, therefore, a major concern is generalizability. There are two main approaches to address this concern: One, find a way to conduct Web surveys on probability samples without losing most of the cost and speed advantages (e.g., by using mixed-mode approaches or probability-based panel surveys).
Two, make adjustments (e.g., propensity scoring, post-stratification, GREG) to nonprobability samples using auxiliary variables. We review both of these approaches as well as lesser-known ones such as respondent-driven sampling.
There are many different ways Web surveys can solve the challenge of generalizability.
Rather than adopting a one-size-fits-all approach, we conclude that the choice of approach should be commensurate with the purpose of the study.
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