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Randomized response methods

Randomized response methods
Randomized response methods
In survey research it is often problematic to ask people sensitive questions because they may refuse to answer or they may provide a socially desirable answer that does not reveal their true status on the sensitive question. To solve this problem Warner (1965) proposed randomized response (RR). Here a chance mechanism hides why respondents say “yes” or “no” to the question being asked.

Thus far RR has been mainly used in research to estimate the prevalence of sensitive characteristics. RR can be used in, for example, self-report studies on criminal behavior (compare, e.g., the two meta-analyses in Lensvelt-Mulders et al.2005). In the Netherlands, much research has been funded by the Expert Centre for Law Enforcement of the Ministry of Justice in the area of regulatory noncompliance in areas as the taxi-driving law, under regulations for food retailers, the law of individual rent subsidy, and the law on agricultural chemicals.
978-1-4614-5689-6
4291-4297
Springer
Heijden, Peter G.M.
85157917-3b33-4683-81be-713f987fd612
Cruyff, Maarten
68bcfa19-3d85-4b0f-a6a4-6e148b265f19
Böckenholt, Ulf
580c976b-4040-4cb2-877c-35e042a224df
Bruinsma, G.J.N.
Weisburd, D.L.
Heijden, Peter G.M.
85157917-3b33-4683-81be-713f987fd612
Cruyff, Maarten
68bcfa19-3d85-4b0f-a6a4-6e148b265f19
Böckenholt, Ulf
580c976b-4040-4cb2-877c-35e042a224df
Bruinsma, G.J.N.
Weisburd, D.L.

Heijden, Peter G.M., Cruyff, Maarten and Böckenholt, Ulf (2014) Randomized response methods. In, Bruinsma, G.J.N. and Weisburd, D.L. (eds.) Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice. Berlin, DE. Springer, pp. 4291-4297. (doi:10.1007/978-1-4614-5690-2_661).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

In survey research it is often problematic to ask people sensitive questions because they may refuse to answer or they may provide a socially desirable answer that does not reveal their true status on the sensitive question. To solve this problem Warner (1965) proposed randomized response (RR). Here a chance mechanism hides why respondents say “yes” or “no” to the question being asked.

Thus far RR has been mainly used in research to estimate the prevalence of sensitive characteristics. RR can be used in, for example, self-report studies on criminal behavior (compare, e.g., the two meta-analyses in Lensvelt-Mulders et al.2005). In the Netherlands, much research has been funded by the Expert Centre for Law Enforcement of the Ministry of Justice in the area of regulatory noncompliance in areas as the taxi-driving law, under regulations for food retailers, the law of individual rent subsidy, and the law on agricultural chemicals.

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More information

Published date: 2014
Organisations: Social Statistics & Demography

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 369742
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/369742
ISBN: 978-1-4614-5689-6
PURE UUID: b70eaea6-be2d-4897-93e8-b63a510c56a6
ORCID for Peter G.M. Heijden: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3345-096X

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Date deposited: 06 Oct 2014 12:32
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:46

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Contributors

Author: Maarten Cruyff
Author: Ulf Böckenholt
Editor: G.J.N. Bruinsma
Editor: D.L. Weisburd

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