Attitude Measurement (Sage Benchmarks in Social Research Methods) (1ST ed.)
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Biographical Note: Roger Jowell is a Research Professor at City University London and is the Founder Director of its Centre for Comparative Social Surveys. He is the Founder Director of the European Social Survey, an academically-driven, cross-national survey designed to chart the attitudes, beliefs and behaviour patterns of European citizens. Prior to joining City, he was the Director of the National Centre for Social Research, which he started in 1969 and helped build into Britain′s largest social research institute. He is an elected member of the International Statistical Institute, an Academician of the Academy for Social Sciences and was awarded a CBE in 2001 for services to social science. He is a recent vice-president of the UK′s Royal Statistical Society. His main research output has been in the field of social and political attitude monitoring and survey methods. His writing has focused primarily on social and political values, social change, voting behaviour and survey methods. His publications include a textbook on survey research, 18 edited books on British Social Attitudes, four co-authored books on British electoral behaviour and a recent co-edited book about the European Social Survey, entitled ′Measuring attitudes cross-nationally′. Table of Contents: VOLUME 1: BASIC CONCEPTS AND HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS Attitudes versus actions - LaPiere, R.T. Attitudes - Allport, G.W. The sociological significance of measurable attitudes - LaPiere, R.T. A consideration of beliefs, and their role in attitude measurement - Fishbein, M. Attitude measurement: a cognitive perspective - Tourangeau, R. A simple theory of the survey response: Answering questions versus revealing preferences - Zaller, J. and Feldman, S. Measuring social distances - Bogardus, E.S. Attitudes can be measured - Thurstone, L.L. A technique for measurement of attitudes - Likert, R. A comparison of the Thurstone and Likert techniques of attitude scale construction - Edwards, A.L. and Kenney, K.C. A basis for scaling qualitative data - Guttman, L. A technique for the construction of attitude scales - Edwards, A.L. and Kilpatrick, F.P. Attitude Measurement - Osgood, C.E., Suci, G.J. and Tannenbaum, P.H. A technique and a model for multi-dimensional attitude scaling - Abelson, R.P. Latent structure analysis - Lazarsfeld, P.F. Convergent and discriminant validation by the multitrait-multimethod matrix - Campbell, D.T. and Fiske, D.W. Reliability and validity assessment in attitude measurement - Bohrnstedt, G.W. VOLUME 2: DESIGNING DIRECT MEASURES Open versus closed questions - Schumann, H. and Presser, S. Strong arguments and weak evidence: The openosed questioning controversy of the 1940s - Converse, J.M. The wording of questions - Rugg, D. and Cantril, H. Experiments in wording opinion questions - Kalton, G., Collins, M., and Brook, L. Three-point Likert scales are good enough - Jacoby, J. and Matell, M.S. Are three-point scales always good enough? - Lehman, D.R., and Hulbert, J. The relationship between number of response categories and reliability of Likert-type questionnaires - Masters, J.R. The optimal number of response alternatives for a scale: A review - Cox, E.P. Feeling thermometers versus 7-point scales: Which are better? - Alwin, D.F. How often is often? - Hakel, M.D. Often is where you find it - Chase, C.I. Vague quantifiers - Bradburn, N.M. and Miles, C. Extreme response on a Likert scale - Albaum, G. and Murphy, B.D. "Don′t know" Item ambiguity or respondent uncertainty? - Coombs, C.H. and Coombs, L.C. Decisions about ignorance: Knowing that you don′t know - Glucksberg, S. and McCloskey, M. "No-opinion" filters: A cognitive perspective - Hippler, H.J. and Schwarz, N. Should we take don′t know for an answer? - Gilljam, M., and Granberg, D. The impact of no opinion response options on data quality: Non-attitude reduction or an invitation to satisfice? - Krosnick, J.A., Holbrook, A.L., Berent, M.K., Carson, R.T., Hanemann, W.M., Kopp, R.J., Mitchell, R.C., Presser, S., Ruud, P.A., Smith, V.K., Moody, W.R., Green, M.C., and Conaway, M. Response alternatives: The impact of their choice and presentation order. - Schwarz, N. and Hippler, H.J. The effect of ordinal position upon responses to items in a checklist - Campbell, D.T. and Mohr, P.J. The effects of offering a middle response option with opinion questions - Kalton, G., Roberts, J. and Holt, D. The middlemost choice on attitude items: Ambivalence, neutrality, or uncertainty - Klopfer, F.J. and Madden, T.M. Experiments with the middle response alternative in survey questions - Bishop, G.F. The measurement of attitudes - Krosnick, J.A., Judd, C.M. and Wittenbrink, B. The retrospective question - Fink, R. VOLUME 3: OBSTACLES TO DIRECT MEASUREMENT Response sets and test validity - Cronbach, L.J. The great response-style myth - Rorer, L.G. Attitude intensity, importance and certainty and susceptibility to response effects - Krosnick, J.A. and Schuman, H. Response strategies for coping with the cognitive demands of attitude measures in surveys - Krosnick, J.A. Effects of presenting one versus two sides of an issue in survey questions - Bishop, G.F., Oldendick, R.W. and Tuchfarber, A.J. Not forbidding isn′t allowing: The cognitive basis of the forbid-allow symmetry - Hippler, H.J. and Schwarz, N. The effect of question order on responses - Bradburn, N.M. and Mason, W.M. An evaluation of a cognitive theory of response-order effects in survey measurement - Krosnick, J.A. and Alwin, D.F. Context and congruity in survey questionnaires - Schuman, H., Kalton, G. and Ludwig, J. Cognitive processes underlying context effects in attitude measurement - Tourangeau, R. and Rasinski, K.A. Acquiescence: Measurement and theory - Martin, J. Controlling for acquiescence response set in scale development - Winkler, J.D., Kanouse, D.E., and Ware, J.E. Privacy and the expression of white racial attitudes - Krysan, M. The effect of black and white interviewers in black responses - Schuman, H. and Converse, J.M. The nature of belief systems in the mass public - Converse, P.E. Pseudo-opinions on public affairs - Bishop, G.F., Oldendick, R.W., Tuchfarber, A.J. and Bennett, S.E. Public opinion and public ignorance: The fine line between attitudes and nonattitudes - Schumann, H. and Presser, S. Question wording effects: Presenting one or both sides of the case - Hedges, B.M. Nonattitudes: A review and evaluation - Smith, T.W. VOLUME 4: EXPANDING THE MEASUREMENT HORIZONS The indirect assessment of social attitudes - Campbell, D.T. New technologies for the direct and indirect assessment of attitudes - Dovidio, J.F. and Fazio, R.H. Evidence for racial prejudice at the implicit level and its relationship with questionnaire measures - Wittenbrink, B., Judd, C.M. and Park, B. Measuring individual differences in implicit cognition: The implicit association test. - Greenwald, A.G., McGhee, D.E. and Schwartz, J.L.K. Implicit attitude measures: Consistency, stability and convergent validity - Cunningham, W.A., Preacher, K.J. and Banaji, M.R. Implicit measures in social cognition research: Their meaning and uses - Fazio, R.H. and Olson, M.A. Physiological techniques of attitude measurement - Mueller, D.J. Galvanic skin response to negro and white experimenters - Rankin, R.E. and Campbell, D.T. Attitude and pupil size - Hess, E.H. A projective method for the study of attitudes - Proshansky, H.M. Measuring attitudes by error-choice: an indirect method - Hammond, K.R. Asking the embarrassing question - Barton, A.M. The lost-letter technique: A tool for social research - Milgram, S., Mainn, L. and Harter, S. Twenty years of bogus pipeline research: A critical review and meta-analysis - Roese, N.J. and Jamieson, D.W. Randomized response: A survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias - Warner, S.L. A multiple-indicator approach to attitude measurement - Cook, S.W. and Selltiz, C. Response latency as a signal to question problems in survey research - Bassili, J.N. and Scott, B.S. Considered opinions: Deliberative polling in Britain - Luskin, R.C., Fishkin, J.S. and Jowell, R. A different take on the deliberative poll: Information, deliberation and attitude constraint - Sturgis, P., Roberts, C. and Allum, N. Equivalence in cross-national research - Przeworski, A and Teune, H. Developing comparable questions in cross-national surveys - Smith, T. Social desirability bias: A demonstration and technique for it reduction - Gordon, R.A. Publisher Marketing: The field of attitude research has long been recognized as one of the most important and influential within social psychology. But the ever-increasing popularity of survey research as a source of what the public thinks and feels about a wide range of issues has brought the subject into the popular arena, heightening the relevance of the theory and practice of attitude measurement. Caroline Roberts and Roger Jowell, acknowledged specialists in this area of research, have combed the literature to bring together the most comprehensive collection available. The four volumes cover key advances since serious study of the subject began, where the selection of articles and papers present the key figures, major steps forward in theory or practice and some of the most creative and ingenious methodological work in the social sciences. This set will provide a rich reference source that should appeal to academics and practitioners alike. Volume 1 - Basic concepts and historical foundations Volume 2 - Designing direct measures Volume 3 - Obstacles to direct measurement Volume 4 - Expanding the measurement horizons
Contributor Bio:Roberts, Caroline |
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