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1
Translate Wisely! An Evaluation of Close and Adaptive Translation Procedures in an Experiment Involving Questionnaire Translation
In: International journal of sociology ; 51 ; 2 ; 135-162 (2022)
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2
Warum wir so wenig über die Sprachen in Deutschland wissen: Spracheinstellungen als Erkenntnisbarriere
In: Diskurs Kindheits- und Jugendforschung / Discourse. Journal of Childhood and Adolescence Research ; 16 ; 4 ; 403-419 ; Perspektiven von Kindern und Jugendlichen auf sprachliche Diversität und Sprachbildungsprozesse (2021)
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3
Afterword: Future Directions in Multinational, Multiregional, and Multicultural (3MC) Survey Research
In: The essential role of language in survey research ; 243-256 (2021)
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Jugendforschung inklusiv und digital: Möglichkeiten, Voraussetzungen und Grenzen von Gebärdensprachvideos in digitalen Erhebungen
In: Diskurs Kindheits- und Jugendforschung / Discourse. Journal of Childhood and Adolescence Research ; 14 ; 3 ; 308-322 ; Neue Methoden der Jugendforschung (2021)
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5
Multi-mode question pretesting: Using traditional cognitive interviews and online testing as complementary methods
In: Survey Methods: Insights from the Field ; 1-14 ; Advancements in Online and Mobile Survey Methods (2021)
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6
Assessing the use of back translation: the shortcomings of back translation as a quality testing method
In: International Journal of Social Research Methodology ; 20 ; 6 ; 573-584 (2021)
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7
The Quality of Big Data: Development, Problems, and Possibilities of Use of Process-Generated Data in the Digital Age
In: Historical Social Research ; 45 ; 3 ; 209-243 (2020)
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8
Integration of Migrant Populations into Health Monitoring in Germany: Results from a Feasibility Study
In: Survey Methods: Insights from the Field ; 1-11 ; Probability and Nonprobability Sampling: Sampling of hard-to-reach survey populations (2019)
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9
Building a Sampling Frame for Migrant Populations via an Onomastic Approach: Lesson learned from the Austrian Immigrant Survey 2016
In: Survey Methods: Insights from the Field ; 1-20 ; Probability and Nonprobability Sampling: Sampling of hard-to-reach survey populations (2019)
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10
Functional equivalence and validity of religiousness indicators in cross-cultural comparative surveys
In: Methodological Innovations ; 9 ; 12 (2019)
Abstract: Cross-cultural comparative surveys have become an important tool to investigate social attitudes across different countries. However, this methodology is confronted with a number of challenges. One of the core problems is the functional equivalence of the concepts and indicators used. In this article, we study this problem in regard to the investigation of religiousness in three prominent surveys, the World Value Survey, the International Social Survey Programme, and the Religion Monitor. Our contribution starts with the fundamental question of the intercultural meaning of single items that are commonly used for the measurement of religiosity. From the comparison of the linguistic formulation of these items in different languages and across the three surveys, we obtain evidence of whether the concept of religiousness has the same meaning in different countries and to what extent the results depend on the formulation of the item. Subsequently, we use confirmatory factor analysis to test whether two religiousness scales derived from the International Social Survey Programme are structurally equivalent across countries. In the final step, we proceed to a substantive analysis, comparing religiousness scales from the three surveys in order to examine to what extent scales that claim to measure the same construct in fact produce similar results when applied to different countries. Our findings suggest that the paradigm of "asking the same questions" is difficult to apply and problematical with respect to some core indicators of individual religiousness and that questionnaires that are based on the Western concept of religion will lead to biased results when applied to worldwide cross-cultural comparison.
Keyword: anthropology; Computer Methods; construct equivalence); cross-cultural research; Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften; functional equivalence (item equivalence; indicator; Indikator; intercultural comparison; interkultureller Vergleich; ISSP; measurement; Messung; Methods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis; Religion Monitor; Religiosität; religiousness; social attitude; Social sciences; sociology; soziale Einstellung; Sozialwissenschaften; Soziologie; Statistical Methods; survey research; Umfrageforschung; World Value Survey
URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/2059799115622756
https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/61751
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11
Questioning Transcription: The Case for the Systematic and Reflexive Interviewing and Reporting (SRIR) Method
In: Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research ; 18 ; 2 ; 22 (2018)
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12
Exploring Language Effects in Crosscultural Survey Research: Does the Language of Administration Affect Answers About Politics?
In: Methods, data, analyses : a journal for quantitative methods and survey methodology (mda) ; 12 ; 1 ; 127-150 (2018)
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13
Language Barriers during the Fieldwork of the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees in Germany
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 75-84 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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14
The Development of a Research Programme to Translate and Test the Personal Well-being Questions in Sylheti and Urdu
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 13-27 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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15
Surveying Immigrants: The Role of Language Attrition and Language Change in the Application of Questionnaires
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 95-105 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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16
Linguistic and Cultural Aspects in Migrant Surveys: Introduction and Overview
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 5-12 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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17
Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues
In: 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 108 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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18
The Place of Expert Review in Translation and Questionnaire Evaluation for Hard-to-Count Populations in National Surveys
In: Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Issues ; 19 ; GESIS-Schriftenreihe ; 29-41 ; GESIS Symposium on "Surveying the Migrant Population: Consideration of Linguistic and Cultural Aspects" (2018)
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19
Translating Answers to Open-ended Survey Questions in Cross-cultural Research: A Case Study on the Interplay between Translation, Coding, and Analysis
In: Field Methods ; 27 ; 3 ; 284-299 (2018)
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20
A Comparison of Two Cognitive Pretesting Techniques Supported by Eye Tracking
In: Social Science Computer Review ; 34 ; 5 ; 582-596 (2018)
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