How a glitch in an online survey replaced the word ‘yes’ with ‘forks’
Dating back to at least early 2023, a bizarre and alarming technical glitch started popping up in some organizations’ online surveys and forms.
A behind-the-scenes blog about research methods at Pew Research Center.
For our latest findings, visit pewresearch.org.
Dating back to at least early 2023, a bizarre and alarming technical glitch started popping up in some organizations’ online surveys and forms.
Surveys that ask about voting can be made more accurate by validating respondents’ self-reported turnout with official voting records.
The final post in our series examines how topic models can and can’t help when classifying large amounts of text.
Keyword oversampling can be a powerful way to analyze uncommon subsets of text data.
Surveys can produce widely different estimates depending on how people are asked about their backgrounds.
Asking follow-up questions can help make sure that poll respondents are interpreting questions as intended.
Asking balanced questions required investing considerable time and effort into developing and testing the questionnaire.
Economic concepts aren’t always as understandable to the rest of us as they are to economists, and the jargon can be difficult to parse.
To represent the views of Indians from a wide range of backgrounds, we fielded our largest-ever single-country survey outside the U.S.
Despite the caste system’s significance in India, there is no consensus on what proportion of Indians belong to each caste category.
Using data from outside organizations has some advantages, but also poses challenges, especially when it comes to media industry data.
To search or browse all of Pew Research Center findings and data by topic, visit pewresearch.org