Results 251 to 260 of about 153,822 (301)
To counteract declining response rates and data quality in web surveys, some survey designers have suggested to increase respondent engagement by making web surveys more game-like. Gamification is defined as “the use of game design elements in non-game contexts” (Deterding et al., 2011, p.
Keusch, Florian
openaire +3 more sources
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Social Science Computer Review, 2002
Web surveys generally use some sort of access control to prevent uninvited respondents from taking part in the survey and to prevent multiple completions by the same (invited) respondent. Restriction of survey access can be accomplished in several technically equivalent ways. However, these methods may not be equivalent from a methodological viewpoint.
Dirk Heerwegh, Geert Loosveldt
exaly +2 more sources
Web surveys generally use some sort of access control to prevent uninvited respondents from taking part in the survey and to prevent multiple completions by the same (invited) respondent. Restriction of survey access can be accomplished in several technically equivalent ways. However, these methods may not be equivalent from a methodological viewpoint.
Dirk Heerwegh, Geert Loosveldt
exaly +2 more sources
Semantic Web surveys and applications [PDF]
The primary purpose of a scientific journal is to be a service to the research community. It is up to the editors-in-chief and the editorial board to assess the needs of the community, and to tailor the journal in such a way that it addresses these needs as closely as possible.
Hitzler, Pascal, Janowicz, Krzysztof
openaire +3 more sources
ACM Computing Surveys, 2002
The unabated growth and increasing significance of the World Wide Web has resulted in a flurry of research activity to improve its capacity for serving information more effectively. But at the heart of these efforts lie implicit assumptions about "quality" and "usefulness" of Web resources and services.
Devanshu Dhyani +2 more
openaire +1 more source
The unabated growth and increasing significance of the World Wide Web has resulted in a flurry of research activity to improve its capacity for serving information more effectively. But at the heart of these efforts lie implicit assumptions about "quality" and "usefulness" of Web resources and services.
Devanshu Dhyani +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Computer, 1998
Developing security methods for the Web is a daunting task, in part because security concerns arose after the fact. Today, with an internationally connected user network and rapidly expanding Web functionality, reliability and security are critical. Vendors engaged in retrofitting security must contend with the Web environment's peculiarities, which ...
Aviel D. Rubin, Daniel E. Geer Jr.
openaire +1 more source
Developing security methods for the Web is a daunting task, in part because security concerns arose after the fact. Today, with an internationally connected user network and rapidly expanding Web functionality, reliability and security are critical. Vendors engaged in retrofitting security must contend with the Web environment's peculiarities, which ...
Aviel D. Rubin, Daniel E. Geer Jr.
openaire +1 more source
A survey of public web services
Proceedings of the 13th international World Wide Web conference on Alternate track papers & posters - WWW Alt. '04, 2004This paper introduces a methodology to provide the first characterization of public Web Services in terms of their evolution, location, complexity, message size, and response time.
Kim S.M., Rosu M.-C.
openaire +2 more sources
Social Science Computer Review, 2001
Web surveys appear to be attaining lower response rates than equivalent mail surveys. One reason may be that there is currently little information on effective strategies for increasing response to Internet-based surveys. Web users are becoming more impatient with high-burden Web interactions.
Scott D. Crawford +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Web surveys appear to be attaining lower response rates than equivalent mail surveys. One reason may be that there is currently little information on effective strategies for increasing response to Internet-based surveys. Web users are becoming more impatient with high-burden Web interactions.
Scott D. Crawford +2 more
openaire +1 more source
A comparison of reliability between telephone and web-based surveys
The purpose of the present study was to compare a methodologically sound telephone interviewing technique to the most promising web survey technique.
Karin Braunsberger
exaly +1 more source
Web development tools: a survey
Computer Networks and ISDN Systems, 1998In this paper we review, classify, and assess 33 existing commercial products in the light of evaluation criteria based on the impact on the application development process, architecture, and user-perceived quality. From this review we draw requirements for new-generation development tools and show how current solutions match different application ...
openaire +1 more source

