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Is there a bias against telephone interviews in qualitative research

Gina Novick
- 01 Aug 2008 - 
- Vol. 31, Iss: 4, pp 391-398
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TLDR
Research is needed comparing these modalities, and examining their impact on data quality and their use for studying varying topics and populations, to contribute evidence-based guidelines for optimizing interview data.
Abstract
Telephone interviews are largely neglected in the qualitative research literature and, when discussed, they are often depicted as a less attractive alternative to face-to-face interviewing. The absence of visual cues via telephone is thought to result in loss of contextual and nonverbal data and to compromise rapport, probing, and interpretation of responses. Yet, telephones may allow respondents to feel relaxed and able to disclose sensitive information, and evidence is lacking that they produce lower quality data. This apparent bias against telephone interviews contrasts with a growing interest in electronic qualitative interviews. Research is needed comparing these modalities, and examining their impact on data quality and their use for studying varying topics and populations. Such studies could contribute evidence-based guidelines for optimizing interview data.

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'Am I not answering your questions properly?' : Clarification, adequacy and responsiveness in semi-structured telephone and face-to-face interviews

TL;DR: In this paper, spoken interaction in semi-structured qualitative research interviews, comparing those that are conducted by telephone or face-to-face, has been studied, drawing upon recent empirical researc...
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eHealth Literacy and Web 2.0 Health Information Seeking Behaviors Among Baby Boomers and Older Adults

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Skype as a Tool for Qualitative Research Interviews

TL;DR: The conclusion is that, although VoIP mediated interviews cannot completely replace face to face interaction, they work well as a viable alternative or complimentary data collection tool for qualitative researchers.
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The telephone medium and semi‐structured interviews: a complementary fit

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue in favour of a medium that has generally been second-rated in qualitative research, and establish telephone interviews as an equally viable option to other established methods of qualitative data collection.
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Enhancing the sample diversity of snowball samples: Recommendations from a research project on anti-dam movements in Southeast Asia

TL;DR: This study performed the first quantitative, medium-N analysis of snowball sampling to identify pathways to sample diversity, analysing 211 reach-outs conducted via snowball sampling, resulting in 81 interviews; these interviews were administered for a research project on anti-dam movements in Southeast Asia.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Conducting Intensive Interviews Using Email: A Serendipitous Comparative Opportunity.

TL;DR: Results suggest that computer-mediated methods allow the research to include isolated, geographically dispersed and/or stigmatized groups who are often overlooked or ignored, important for social work researchers who need additional research methods to collect rich data about these difficultto-access groups.
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Internet Recruitment and E-Mail Interviews in Qualitative Studies

TL;DR: The authors address issues of appropriateness, adequacy, representativeness, sample bias, data fraud, flexibility and consistency in interviewing, timing, elimination of the need for transcription, oral versus written communication, reliability and validity, and ethical concerns.
Journal ArticleDOI

Designing and Conducting Health Surveys

Lu Ann Day
- 01 Mar 1992 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Phone Interviewing as a Means of Data Collection: Lessons Learned and Practical Recommendations

TL;DR: In dem vorliegenden Beitrag werden konkrete Vorschlage zur Nutzung von Telefoninterviews als Datenerhebungsstrategie gemacht.
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