Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

 
 
Session Overview
Date: Wednesday, 21/Feb/2024
9:00am
-
10:00am
Begin Check-in
10:00am
-
1:00pm
Workshop 1
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Lisa de Vries, Bielefeld University, Germany
Chair: Zaza Zindel, Bielefeld University, Germany
 

Embracing Diversity: Integrating Queer Perspectives in Online Survey Research

Zaza Zindel, Lisa de Vries

Bielefeld University, Germany

Workshop 2
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Blanka Szeitl, HUN-REN, Hungary
 

Probability theory in survey methods

Blanka Szeitl

HUN-REN, Hungary

 
1:00pm
-
1:30pm
Break
1:30pm
-
4:30pm
Workshop 3 - ONLINE!
Location: Online (Virtual Room)
Chair: Raffael Meier, onlineumfragen.com, Switzerland
 

ONLINE WORKSHOP: The Magnificent Seven: Identify and Reduce Common Data Quality Issues in Online Surveys

Raffael Meier1,2

1: onlineumfragen.com GmbH, Switzerland; 2: Pädagogische Hochschule Schwyz, Switzerland

Workshop 4
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Ji-Ping Lin, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
 

Why Data Science and Open Science Are Key to Build Smart Big Data: An Example Based on a Decade Research on Hard-to-Reach Population in Taiwan

Ji-Ping Lin

Academia Sinica, Taiwan

Workshop 5
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Ludger Kesting, Tivian, Germany
 

Flexible Text Categorisation in Practice: Using AI Models to Analyse Open-Ended Survey Responses

Ludger Kesting

Tivian, Germany

4:30pm
-
5:00pm
Break
5:00pm
-
6:30pm
DGOF Members General Meeting
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
6:30pm
-
7:00pm
Break
7:00pm
-
8:00pm
Early Career Speed Networking Event
Location: Franky's Bar - Venloer Str. 403, 50825 Köln
8:00pm
-
11:00pm
GOR 24 Get Together
Location: Franky's Bar - Venloer Str. 403, 50825 Köln
Date: Thursday, 22/Feb/2024
8:00am
-
9:00am
Begin Check-in
9:00am
-
10:15am
GOR 24 Opening & Keynote I
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
 

Digital monopolies: How Big Tech stole the internet - and how we can reclaim it

Martin Andree

AMP Digital Ventures, Germany

10:15am
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10:45am
Break
10:45am Track A: Survey Research: Advancements in Online and Mobile Web Surveys

sponsored by GESIS – Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
Track B: Data Science: From Big Data to Smart Data
Track C: Politics, Public Opinion, and Communication
Track D: Digital Methods in Applied Research
Track T: GOR Thesis Award 2024
10:45am
-
11:45am
A1: Survey Methods Interventions 1
Location: Seminar 1 (Room 1.01)
Chair: Almuth Lietz, Deutsches Zentrum für Integrations- und Migrationsforschung (DeZIM), Germany
 

Providing Appreciative Feedback to Optimizing Respondents – Is Positive Feedback in Web Surveys Effective in Preventing Non-differentiation and Speeding?

Marek Fuchs, Anke Metzler

Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany



Comparing various types of attention checks in web-based questionnaires: Experimental evidence from the German Internet Panel and the Swedish Citizen Panel

Joss Roßmann1, Sebastian Lundmark2, Henning Silber1, Tobias Gummer1

1: GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; 2: SOM Institute, University of Gothenburg, Sweden



Evaluating methods to prevent and detect inattentive respondents in web surveys

Lukas Olbrich1,2, Joseph W. Sakshaug1,2,3, Eric Lewandowski4

1: Institute for Employment Research (IAB), Germany; 2: LMU Munich; 3: University of Mannheim; 4: NYU

B1: Large, Larger, LLMs
Location: Seminar 3 (Room 1.03/1.04)
Chair: Daniela Wetzelhütter, University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, Austria
 

Free Text Classification with Neural Networks: Training, Process Integration and Results for ISCO-08 Job Titles

Patrick Mertes1, Sophie Tschersich2

1: Inspirient GmbH, Germany; 2: Verian Group, Germany



Where do LLMs fit in NLP pipelines?

Paul Simmering, Paavo Huoviala

Q Agentur für Forschung GmbH, Germany



Sentiment Analysis in the Wild

Orkan Dolay1, Denis Bonnay2

1: Bilendi & respondi, France; 2: Université Paris Nanterre, France

C1: Media Consumption
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Felix Cassel, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
 

Anxiety and Psychological distance as a drive of mainstream and online media consumption during war

Vered Elishar, Dana Weimann-Saks, Yaron Ariel

The Max Stern Yezreel Valley College, Israel



Engagement Dynamics and Dual Screen Use During the 2022 FIFA World Cup

Dana Weimann-Saks, Vered Elishar, Yaron Ariel

Max Stern Academic College of Emek Yezreel

D1: Best Practice Cases
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
Chair: Yannick Rieder, Janssen EMEA, Germany
 

Brave new world! How artificial intelligence is changing employee research at DHL.

Sven Slodowy1, Neslihan Ekinci2

1: (r)evolution GmbH, Germany; 2: DHL Group

T1: GOR Thesis Award 2024 Competition: Bachelor/Master
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Olaf Wenzel, Wenzel Marktforschung, Germany
 

Fair Sampling for Global Ranking Recovery

Georg Ahnert

University of Mannheim, Germany



Understanding the Mobile Consumer along the Customer Journey: A Behavioural Data Analysis based on Smartphone Sensing Technology

Isabelle Halscheid1,2

1: Technische Hochschule Köln, Germany; 2: Murmuras GmbH, Germany



Effects of active and passive use on subjective well-being of users of professional networks

Constanze Roeger

TH Köln, Germany

11:45am
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12:00pm
Break
12:00pm
-
1:15pm
A2: Mixing Survey Modes
Location: Seminar 1 (Room 1.01)
Chair: Jessica Daikeler, GESIS, Germany
 

Navigating the Digital Shift: Integrating Web in IAB (Panel) Surveys

Mackeben Jan

Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung, Germany



Effect of Incentives in a mixed-mode Survey of Movers

Manuela Schmidt

University of Bonn, Germany



Mode Matters Most, Or Does It? Investigating Mode Effects in Factorial Survey Experiments

Sophie Katharina Hensgen1, Alexander Patzina2, Joe Sakshaug1,3

1: Institute for Employment Research, Germany; 2: University of Bamberg, Germany; 3: Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich, Germany

B2: AI Tools for Survey Research 1
Location: Seminar 3 (Room 1.03/1.04)
Chair: Timo Lenzner, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany
 

In Search of the Truth. Are synthetic, AI generated data the future of market research?

Barbara von Corvin, Annelies Verhaeghe

Human8 Europe, Belgium



ChatGPT as a data analyst: focus on the benefits and risks

Daniela Wetzelhütter1, Dimitri Prandner2

1: University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, Austria; 2: Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria



Chatbot Design as an Alternative to a Mobile First Design in Web Surveys: Data Quality and Respondent Experience

Ceyda Çavuşoğlu Deveci, Marek Fuchs, Anke Metzler

Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany

C2: Online research, attitudes, preferences, behavior
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Dana Weimann Saks, The Max Stern Yezreel Valley College, Israel
 

Correlating Abortion Attitude Measures Across Surveys: A Novel Approach to Leveraging Historical Survey Data

Josh Pasek

University of Michigan, United States of America



Does survey response quality vary by respondents’ political attitudes? Evidence from the GGGS 2021

Alice Barth

University of Bonn, Germany



Building the city: a novel study on architectural style preferences in Sweden

Felix Cassel, Anders Carlander

University of Gothenburg, Sweden



Frequency Matters? Assessing the Impact of Online Interruptions on Work Pace

Eilat Chen Levy1, Sheizaf Rafaeli2, Yaron Ariel1

1: Max Stern Academic College of Emek Yezreel; 2: Shenkar College of Engineering, Design and Art

D2: Innovation in Practice: LLMs and more ...
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
Chair: Stefan Oglesby, data IQ AG, Switzerland
 

Beyond Reports: Maximizing Customer Segmentation Impact with AI-Driven Persona Conversations

Theo Gerstenmaier, Kristina Schmidtel

Factworks, Germany



How good are conversational agents for online qualitative research?

Denis Bonnay1, Orkan Dolay2, Merja Daoud2

1: Université Paris Nanterre, France; 2: Bilendi



Smartphone app-based mobility research

Beat Fischer

intervista AG, Switzerland

T2: GOR Thesis Award 2024 Competition: PhD
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Olaf Wenzel, Wenzel Marktforschung, Germany
 

Challenging the Gold Standard: A Methodological Study of the Quality and Errors of Web Tracking Data

Oriol J. Bosch1,2,3

1: University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 2: The London School of Economics, United Kingdom; 3: Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain



The Language of Emotions: Smartphone-Based Sentiment Analysis

Timo Koch1,2

1: University of St. Gallen, Switzerland; 2: LMU Munich



Imputation of missing data from split questionnaire designs in social surveys

Julian B. Axenfeld

German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany



Essays on Inference for Non-probability Samples and Survey Data Integration

Camilla Salvatore

Utrecht University, The Netherlands

1:15pm
-
2:30pm
Lunch Break
Location: Cafeteria (Room 0.15)
2:30pm
-
3:30pm
P 1.1: Postersession
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
 

Fear in the Digital Age – How Nomophobia together with FoMO and extensive smartphone use lowers social and psychological wellbeing

Christian Bosau, Paula Merkel

Rheinische Fachhochschule gGmbH (RFH), Germany



Is less really more? The Impact of Survey Frequency on Participation and Response Behaviour in an Online Panel Survey

Johann Carstensen, Sebastian Lang, Heiko Quast

German Centre for Higher Education Research and Science Studies (DZHW), Germany

P 1.2: Postersession
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
 

Digitalisation: Catalyzing the Transition to a Circular Economy in Ukraine

Tetiana Gorokhova

Centre for Advanced Internet Studies, Germany



Device use in a face-to-face recruited neighborhood survey.

Yfke Ongena, Marieke Haan

University of Groningen, Netherlands, The

P 1.3: Postersession
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
 

Long Term Attrition and Sample Composition Over Time: 11 Years of the German Internet Panel

Tobias Rettig, Anne Balz

University of Mannheim, Germany



SampcompR: A new R-Package for Sample Comparisons and Bias Analyses

Björn Rohr, Henning Silber, Barbara Felderer

GESIS - Leibnitz Institute for Social Sciences, Germany

P 1.4: Postersession
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
 

Ask a Llama - Creating variance in synthetic survey data

Matthias Roth

GESIS-Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften in Mannheim, Germany



To Share or Not to Share? Analyzing Survey Responses on Smartphone Sensor Data Sharing through Text Mining.

Marc Smeets, Vivian Meertens, Jeldrik Bakker

Statistics Netherlands, Netherlands, The

P 1.5: Postersession
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
 

The AI Reviewer: Exploring the Potential of Large Language Models in Scientific Research Evaluation

Dorian Tsolak, Zaza Zindel, Simon Kühne

Bielefeld University, Germany



Can socially desirable responding be reduced with unipolar response scales?

Vaka Vésteinsdóttir, Haukur Freyr Gylfason

University of Iceland, Iceland

3:30pm
-
3:45pm
Break
3:45pm
-
4:45pm
A3.1: Solutions for Survey Nonresponse
Location: Seminar 1 (Room 1.01)
Chair: Oriol J. Bosch, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
 

Does detailed information on IT-literacy help to explain nonresponse and design nonresponse adjustment weights in a probability-based online panel?

Barbara Felderer1, Jessica Herzing2

1: GESIS, Germany; 2: University of Bern



Youth Nonresponse in the Understanding Society Survey: Investigating the Impact of Life Events

Camilla Salvatore, Peter Lugtig, Bella Struminskaya

Utrecht University, The Netherlands



Exploring incentive preferences in survey participation: How do socio-demographic factors and personal variables influence the choice of incentive?

Almuth Lietz, Jonas Köhler

Deutsches Zentrum für Integrations- und Migrationsforschung (DeZIM), Germany

A3.2: Survey Instruments
Location: Seminar 3 (Room 1.03/1.04)
Chair: Cornelia Neuert, GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany
 

Unmapped potentials: Measuring and considering the self-defined residential area of individuals

Maximilian Sprengholz1, Zerrin Salikutluk2, Christian Hunkler3

1: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin; 2: DeZIM-Institut, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin; 3: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin



Partnership biographies in self-administered surveys: The effect of screening-in information on survey outcomes

Lisa Schmid, Theresa Nutz, Irina Bauer

GESIS – Leibniz-Institute for the social sciences, Germany



Considering Respondents’ Preferences: The Effects of Self-Selecting the Content in Web Survey Questionnaires

Katharina Pfaff, Sylvia Kritzinger

Universität Wien, Austria

B3: The Power of Social Media Data
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Ádám Stefkovics, HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary
 

Bridging Survey and Twitter Data: Understanding the Sources of Differences

Josh Pasek1, Lisa Singh2, Trivellore Raghunathan1, Ceren Budak1, Michael Jackson3, Jessica Stapleton3, Leticia Bode2, Le Bao2, Michael Traugott1, Nathan Wycoff2, Yanchen Wang2

1: University of Michigan, United States of America; 2: Georgetown University, United States of America; 3: SSRS, United States of America



Physical Proximity and Digital Connections: The Impact of Geographic Location on Twitter User Interaction

Long Nguyen1, Zoran Kovacevic2

1: Bielefeld University; 2: ETH Zürich



Gender (self-)portrayal and stereotypes on TikTok

Dorian Tsolak1,2,3, Stefan Knauff1,2,3, Long H. Nguyen1,2, Rian Hedayet Zaman1, Jonas Möller1, Yasir Ammar Mohammed1, Ceren Tüfekçi1

1: Bielefeld University, Germany; 2: Bielefeld Graduate School in History and Sociology, Bielefeld; 3: Institute for Interdisciplinary Research on Conflict and Violence, Bielefeld

C3: Artificial Intelligence
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Julia Susanne Weiß, GESIS, Germany
 

AI: Friend or Foe? Concerns and Willingness to Embrace AI technologies in Israel

Vlad Vasiliu1, Gal Yavetz2

1: Academic College of Emek Yezreel, Israel; 2: Bar-Ilan University, Israel



Human Accuracy in Identifying AI-Generated Content

Holger Lütters1, Malte Friedrich-Freksa2, Oskar Küsgen3

1: HTW Berlin, Germany; 2: horizoom GmbH, Germany; 3: pangea labs GmbH, Germany



Industry study: Experiences, expectations, hopes and challenges of working with AI in qualitative research.

Philipp Merkel, Matea Majstorovic

KERNWERT, Germany

D3: Virtual Respondents and Audiences - Is This the Future of Survey Research? (organised by marktforschung.de)
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
Chair: Holger Geissler, marktforschung.de, Germany

Panelists:
Dirk Held, Co-Founder & Managing Director of DECODE Marketing and Co-Founder of Aimpower
Louise Leitsch, Director Research of Appinio
Frank Buckler, Founder & CEO of Success Drivers & Supra Tools
Florian Kögl, Founder & CEO of ReDem
4:45pm
-
5:00pm
Break
5:00pm
-
6:00pm
A4.1: Innovation in Interviewing & Coding
Location: Seminar 1 (Room 1.01)
Chair: Jessica Donzowa, Max Planck Institute für demographische Forschung, Germany
 

Exploring effects of life-like virtual interviewers on respondents’ answers in a smartphone survey

Jan Karem Höhne1,2, Frederick G. Conrad3, Cornelia Neuert4, Joshua Claassen1

1: German Center for Higher Education Research and Science Studies (DZHW); 2: Leibniz University Hannover; 3: University of Michigan; 4: GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences



API vs. human coder: Comparing the performance of speech-to-text transcription using voice answers from a smartphone survey

Jan Karem Höhne1,2, Timo Lenzner3

1: German Center for Higher Education Research and Science Studies (DZHW); 2: Leibniz University Hannover; 3: GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences



Can life-like virtual interviewers increase the response quality of open-ended questions?

Cornelia Neuert1, Jan Höhne2, Joshua Claaßen2

1: GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; 2: DZHW; Leibniz University Hannover

A4.2: Data Quality Assessments 1
Location: Seminar 3 (Room 1.03/1.04)
Chair: Patricia Hadler, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany
 

Data Quality in a Long and Complex Online-Only Survey: The UK Generations and Gender Survey (GGS)

Olga Maslovskaya, Grace Chang, Brienna Perelli-Harris

University of Southampton



Screening the Screens: Comparing Sample Profiles and Data Quality between PC and Mobile Respondents

Eva Aizpurua1, Gianmaria Bottoni2

1: National Centre for Social Research, United Kingdom; 2: European Social Survey Headquarters - City, University of London



Exploring Device Differences: Analyzing Sample Composition and Data Quality in a Large-Scale Survey

Alexandra Asimov, Sarah Thiesen, Michael Blohm

GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany

B4: Willingness to participate in passive data collection studies
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Johannes Volk, Destatis - Federal Statistical Office Germany, Germany
 

The influence of conditional and unconditional incentives on the willingness to participate in web tracking studies

Judith Gilsbach, Joachim Piepenburg, Frank Mangold, Sebastian Stier, Bernd Weiss

GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany



Intentions vs. Reality. Validating Willingness to Participate Measures in Vignette Experiments Using Real-World Participation Data

Ádám Stefkovics1,2,3, Zoltán Kmetty1,4

1: HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary; 2: IQSS, Harvard University; 3: Századvég Foundation; 4: Eötvös Loránd University



Who is willing to participate in an app- or web-based travel diary study?

Danielle Remmerswaal1,2, Barry Schouten1,2, Peter Lugtig1, Bella Struminskaya1

1: Utrecht University; 2: Statistics Netherlands

C4: Political Communication and Social Media
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Josef Hartmann, Verian (formerly Kantar Public), Germany
 

Mapping news sharing on Twitter: A bottom-up approach based on network embeddings

Felix Gaisbauer1, Armin Pournaki2,3, Jakob Ohme1

1: Weizenbaum-Institut e.V., Germany; 2: Max-Planck-Institut für Mathematik in den Naturwissenschaften, Germany; 3: Sciences Po, médialab, Paris, France



Individual-level and party-level factors of German MPs’ general and migration-related political communication in parliament and on Facebook between 2013 and 2017

Philipp Darius

Hertie School, Germany

D4: Wissenschaft trifft Praxis. Wann ist eine Online-Stichprobe gut für welchen Bedarf.
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
Chair: Otto Hellwig, Bilendi & respondi, Germany

Impulse von:
Dr. Carina Cornesse (German Institute for Economic Research, Germany & DGOF Vorstand)
Menno Smid (Vorstandsvorsitzender (CEO) bei Infas Holding AG)

Weitere Diskutanten:
Beate Waibel-Flanz (Business Insights - Market research Manager bei REWE GROUP & stellv. Sprecherin des BVM Regionalrates)
Dr. Barbara Felderer (Teamleiterin Survey Design & Methodology Survey Statistics bei Gesis)
 

Wann ist eine Stichprobe “fit-for-purpose”?

Carina Cornesse

German Institute for Economic Research, Germany

8:00pm
-
11:00pm
GOR 24 Party
Location: Mach Bar - Zülpicher Str. 40, 50674 Köln
Date: Friday, 23/Feb/2024
9:30am
-
10:00am
Begin Check-in
10:00am
-
10:45am
Keynote 2: Keynote 2
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)
 

Data collection using mobile apps: What can we do to increase participation?

Annette Jäckle

University of Essex, United Kingdom

10:45am
-
11:15am
GOR Award Ceremony
11:15am
-
11:45am
Break
11:45am Track A.1: Survey Research: Advancements in Online and Mobile Web Surveys

sponsored by GESIS – Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
Track A.2: Survey Research: Advancements in Online and Mobile Web Surveys

sponsored by GESIS – Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
Track B: Data Science: From Big Data to Smart Data
Track C: Politics, Public Opinion, and Communication
Track D: Digital Methods in Applied Research
11:45am
-
12:45pm
A5.1: Recruiting Survey Participants
Location: Seminar 1 (Room 1.01)
Chair: Olga Maslovskaya, University of Southampton, United Kingdom
 

Recruiting online panel through face-to-face and push-to-web surveys.

Blanka Szeitl, Vera Messing, Ádám Stefkovics, Bence Ságvári

HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary



Initiating Chain-Referral for Virtual Respondent-Driven Sampling – A Pilot Study with Experiments

Carina Cornesse1,2, Mariel McKone Leonard3, Julia Witton1, Julian Axenfeld1, Jean-Yves Gerlitz2, Olaf Groh-Samberg2, Sabine Zinn1

1: German Institute for Economic Research; 2: University of Bremen; 3: German Center for Integration and Migration

A5.2: Detecting Undesirable Response Behavior
Location: Seminar 3 (Room 1.03/1.04)
Chair: Jan-Lucas Schanze, GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Germany
 

Who is going back and why? Using survey navigation paradata to differentiate between potential satisficers and optimizers in web surveys

Daniil Lebedev1, Peter Lugtig2, Bella Struminskaya2

1: GESIS – Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften in Mannheim, Germany; 2: Utrecht University, Netherlands



Socially Desirable Responding in Panel Studies – Does Repeated Interviewing Affect Answers to Sensitive Behavioral Questions?

Fabienne Kraemer

GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences



Distinguishing satisficing and optimising web survey respondents using paradata

Daniil Lebedev

GESIS – Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften in Mannheim, Germany

B5: To Trace or to Donate, That’s the Question
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Alexander Wenz, University of Mannheim, Germany
 

Exploring the Viability of Data Donations for WhatsApp Chat Logs

Julian Kohne1,2, Christian Montag2

1: GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences; 2: Ulm University



The Mix Makes the Difference: Using Mobile Sensing Data to Foster the Understanding of Non-Compliance in Experience Sampling Studies

Ramona Schoedel1,2, Thomas Reiter2

1: Charlotte Fresenius Hochschule, University of Psychology, Germany; 2: LMU Munich, Department of Psychology

C5: Politics, Media, Trust
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Felix Gaisbauer, Weizenbaum-Institut e.V., Germany
 

What makes media contents credible? A survey experiment on the relative importance of visual layout, objective quality and confirmation bias for public opinion formation

Sandra Walzenbach

Konstanz University, Germany



Sharing is caring! Youth Political Participation in the Digital Age

Julia Susanne Weiß, Frauke Riebe

GESIS, Germany



Navigating Political Turbulence: A Study of Trust and online / offline Engagement in Unstable Political Contexts

Yaron Ariel, Dana Weimann Saks, Vered Elishar

The Max Stern Yezreel Valley College, Israel

D5: KI Forum: Impuls-Session - Chancen und Regulierungen
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)


Session Moderators:
Oliver Tabino, Q Agentur für Forschung
Yannick Rieder, Janssen-Cilag GmbH
Georg Wittenburg, Inspirient

This session is in German.
 

EU AI Act: Innovationsmotor oder Innovationsbremse?

Alessandro Blank

KI Bundesverband, Germany



Das Potential von Foundation Models und Generativer KI – Ein Blick in die Zukunft

Sven Giesselbach

IAIS, Germany

12:45pm
-
2:00pm
Lunch Break
Location: Cafeteria (Room 0.15)
2:00pm
-
3:00pm
A6.1: Questionnaire Design Choices
Location: Seminar 1 (Room 1.01)
Chair: Julian B. Axenfeld, German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), Germany
 

Grid design in mixed device surveys: an experiment comparing four grid designs in a general Dutch population survey.

Deirdre Giesen, Maaike Kompier, Jan van den Brakel

Statistics Netherlands, Netherlands, The



Towards a mobile web questionnaire for the Vacation Survey: UX design challenges

Vivian Meertens, Maaike Kompier

Statistics Netherlands, Netherlands, The



Optimising recall-based travel diaries: Lessons from the design of the Wales National Travel Survey

Eva Aizpurua, Peter Cornick, Shane Howe

National Centre for Social Research, United Kingdom

A6.2: Data Quality Assessments 2
Location: Seminar 3 (Room 1.03/1.04)
Chair: Fabienne Kraemer, GESIS Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Germany
 

Can we identify and prevent cheating in online surveys? Evidence from a web tracking experiment.

Oriol J. Bosch1,2,3, Melanie Revilla4

1: University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 2: The London School of Economics, United Kingdom; 3: Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain; 4: Institut Barcelona Estudis Internacionals (IBEI), Spain



The Quality of Survey Items and the Integration of the Survey Quality Predictor 3.0 into the Questionnaire Development Process

Lydia Repke

GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany



Probability-based online and mixed-method panels from a data quality perspective

Blanka Szeitl1,2, Gergely Horzsa1,2

1: HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary; 2: Panelstory Opinion Polls, Hungary

B6.1: Automatic analysis of answers to open-ended questions in surveys
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Barbara Felderer, GESIS, Germany
 

Using the Large Language Model BERT to categorize open-ended responses to the "most important political problem" in the German Longitudinal Election Study (GLES)

Julia Susanne Weiß, Jan Marquardt

GESIS, Germany



The Genesis of Systematic Analysis Methods Using AI: An Explorative Case Study

Stephanie Gaaw, Cathleen M. Stuetzer, Maznev Petko

TU Dresden, Germany



Insights from the Hypersphere - Embedding Analytics in Market Research

Lars Schmedeke, Tamara Keßler

SPLENDID Research, Germany

B6.2: AI Tools for Survey Research 2
Location: Seminar 4 (Room 1.11)
Chair: Florian Keusch, University of Mannheim, Germany
 

Vox Populi, Vox AI? Estimating German Public Opinion Through Language Models

Leah von der Heyde1, Anna-Carolina Haensch1, Alexander Wenz2

1: LMU Munich, Germany; 2: University of Mannheim, Germany



Integrating LLMs into cognitive pretesting procedures: A case study using ChatGPT

Timo Lenzner, Hadler Patricia

GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany



Using Large Language Models for Evaluating and Improving Survey Questions

Alexander Wenz1, Anna-Carolina Haensch2

1: University of Mannheim, Germany; 2: LMU Munich, Germany

D6: KI Forum: KI Café
Location: Auditorium (Room 0.09/0.10/0.11)


Session Moderators:
Oliver Tabino, Q Agentur für Forschung
Yannick Rieder, Janssen-Cilag GmbH
Georg Wittenburg, Inspirient

This session is in German.

Moderierter Austausch zu folgenden Themen:

• Messbare Qualität von KI-Tools ist Grundlage für Vertrauen und Voraussetzung für den betrieblichen Einsatz, aber welche Qualitätskriterien haben sich bewährt? Wie können sie erfasst und verglichen werden?
• Wie implementiert man KI-Anwendungen in Prozesse? Wobei ist die Nutzung bereits etabliert? Was gibt es dabei zu beachten?
• KI und Ethik: Was geht und was nicht?
3:00pm
-
3:15pm
Break
3:15pm
-
4:15pm
A7.1: Survey Methods Interventions 2
Location: Seminar 1 (Room 1.01)
Chair: Joss Roßmann, GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany
 

Pushing older target persons to the web: Do we still need a paper questionnaire?

Jan-Lucas Schanze, Caroline Hahn, Oshrat Hochman

GESIS - Leibniz-Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Germany



Clarification features in web surveys: Usage and impact of “on-demand” instructions

Patricia Hadler, Timo Lenzner, Ranjit K. Singh, Lukas Schick

GESIS - Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany

A7.2: Social Media Recruited Surveys
Location: Seminar 3 (Room 1.03/1.04)
Chair: Tobias Rettig, University of Mannheim, Germany
 

Assessing the impact of advertisement design on response quality in surveys using social media recruitment

Jessica Donzowa1,2, Simon Kühne2, Zaza Zindel2

1: Max Planck Institut for Demographic Research, Germany; 2: Bielefeld University, Germany



Do expensive social media ad groups pay off in the recruitment of a non-probabilistic panel? An inspection on coverage and cost structure

Jessica Daikeler, Joachim Piepenburg, Bernd Weiß

GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany

B7: Mobile Apps and Sensors
Location: Seminar 2 (Room 1.02)
Chair: Ramona Schoedel, Charlotte Fresenius Hochschule, University of Psychology, Germany
 

Mechanisms of Participation in Smartphone App Data Collection: A Research Synthesis

Wai Tak Tung, Alexander Wenz

University of Mannheim



“The value of privacy is not as high as finding my person”: Self-disclosure practices on dating apps illustrate an existential dilemma for data protection

Lusine Petrosyan, Grant Blank

University of Oxford, United Kingdom



Money or Motivation? Decision Criteria to participate in Smart Surveys

Johannes Volk, Lasse Häufglöckner

Destatis - Federal Statistical Office Germany, Germany

   

 
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