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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1803/4052

Title: Do Open-Ended Questions Measure "Salient" Issues?
Authors: Geer, John Gray
Keywords: Salient issues
Open-ended questions
Issue Date: 1991
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Citation: This is a post-print of "Do Open-Ended Questions Measure 'Salient' Issues?" by John Geer from Public Opinion Quarterly 55:3, 360-370. Copyright © 1991 Oxford University Press.
???metadata.dc.subject.lcsh???: Public opinion polls -- Methodology
Public opinion -- United States
United States -- Politics and government -- Public opinion
Abstract: Closed-ended questions dominate most interview schedules. Yet the almost exclusive use of this form did not arise because open-ended questions, its major competitor, proved to be weak indicators of public opinion. Instead, responses from open-ended questions proved more difficult and expensive to code and analyze than those from closed-ended questions. Although such practical concerns are important, the real task of survey researchers is to measure public opinion accurately. Using an experimental design, this article tests whether open-ended questions measure the important concerns of respondents' one of the long-claimed advantages of this format. The results, on balance, show that open-ended comments reflect such concerns, suggesting that pollsters may want to include more of these questions in their surveys of public opinion.
Description: Originally published in Public Opinion Quarterly, v. 55, no. 3 (p. 360-370).
URI: http://poq.oxfordjournals.org/content/vol55/issue3/index.dtl
http://hdl.handle.net/1803/4052
ISSN: 0033-362X
Appears in Collections:Department of Political Science - Faculty publications

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