Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Pew Research Center makes the case-level microdata for much of its research available to the public for secondary analysis after a period of time. These datasets are listed below by collection date. A listing of our American Trends Panel datasets and religion datasets are also available. See this post for more information on how to use our datasets and contact us at info@pewresearch.org with any questions.
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This dataset explores how many Internet users go to online groups, the types of groups frequented, and what people get out of their ties to online groups.
The data set contains questions about dot.coms, fears of online crime, music, as well as basic tracking.
This dataset comprises the Pew Internet Project’s longitudinal survey in which about 40% of respondents to the March 2000 survey on email use and social connectedness were called back in March 2001 and asked the same questions.
This data is for a callback survey conducted between June 19, 2001 and August 6, 2001 of a sample of 500 Internet users who in past surveys had identified themselves as seekers of health information on the Internet. Includes such topics the trustworthines