%0 Report %D 2016 %T Why Statistical Agencies Need to Take Privacy-loss Budgets Seriously, and What It Means When They Do %A John M. Abowd %G eng %U http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/ldi/32/ %0 Conference Paper %B 2015 Joint Program in Survey Methodology (JPSM) Distinguished Lecture %D 2015 %T Web Surveys, Online Panels, and Paradata: Automating Responsive Design %A Allan L. McCutcheon %B 2015 Joint Program in Survey Methodology (JPSM) Distinguished Lecture %C University of Maryland. College Park, MD %8 04/2015 %G eng %U http://www.jpsm.umd.edu/ %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare %D 2015 %T Who’s Left Out? Characteristics of Households in Economic Need not Receiving Public Support %A Fusaro, V. %B Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare %V 42 %P 65-85 %G eng %N 3 %0 Conference Paper %B 70th Annual Conference of the American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) %D 2015 %T Why Do Interviewers Speed Up? An Examination of Changes in Interviewer Behaviors over the Course of the Survey Field Period %A Olson, K. %A Smyth, J.D. %B 70th Annual Conference of the American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) %C Hollywood, Florida %G eng %U http://www.aapor.org/AAPORKentico/Conference/Recent-Conferences.aspx %0 Conference Paper %B NSF-Census Research Network (NCRN) Spring Meeting %D 2014 %T Web Surveys, Online Panels, and Paradata: Automating Adaptive Design %A McCutcheon, A.L. %B NSF-Census Research Network (NCRN) Spring Meeting %C Washington, DC %G eng %U http://www.ncrn.info/event/ncrn-meeting-spring-2014 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology %D 2014 %T What are You Doing Now? Activity Level Responses and Errors in the American Time Use Survey %A T. Al Baghal %A Belli, R.F. %A Phillips, A.L. %A Ruther, N. %B Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology %V 2 %G eng %N 4 %& 519-537 %0 Journal Article %J Statistical Journal of the International Association for Official Statistics %D 2014 %T Why data availability is such a hard problem %A A. F. Karr %K Data Archive %K Data availability %K public good %K replicability %K reproducibility %X If data availability were a simple problem, it would already have been resolved. In this paper, I argue that by viewing data availability as a public good, it is possible to both understand the complexities with which it is fraught and identify a path to a solution. %B Statistical Journal of the International Association for Official Statistics %V 30 %8 06/2014 %G eng %N 2 %& 101-107 %0 Conference Paper %B Proceedings of the Tenth Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) %D 2014 %T Would a Privacy Fundamentalist Sell their DNA for \$1000... if Nothing Bad Happened Thereafter? A Study of the Western Categories, Behavior Intentions, and Consequences %A Woodruff, A. %A Pihur, V. %A Acquisti, A. %A Consolvo, S. %A Schmidt, L. %A Brandimarte, L. %B Proceedings of the Tenth Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security (SOUPS) %I ACM %C New York, NY %G eng %U https://www.usenix.org/conference/soups2014/proceedings/presentation/woodruff %0 Conference Paper %B American Association for Public Opinion Research %D 2013 %T What are you doing now?: Audit trails, Activity level responses and error in the American Time Use Survey %A T. Al Baghal %A Phillips, A.L. %A Ruther, N. %A Belli, R.F. %A Stuart, L. %A Eck, A. %A Soh, L-K %B American Association for Public Opinion Research %C Boston, MA %G eng %U http://www.aapor.org/AAPORKentico/Conference/Recent-Conferences.aspx %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Legal Studies %D 2013 %T What is Privacy Worth? %A Acquisti, A. %A John, L. %A Loewenstein, G. %B Journal of Legal Studies %V 42 %P 249–274 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Children and Youth Services Review %D 2012 %T The welfare reforms of the 1990s and the stratification of material well-being among low-income households with children %A Shaefer, H. Luke %A Ybarra, Marci %X

We examine the incidence of material hardship experienced by low-income households with children, before and after the major changes to U.S. anti-poverty programs during the 1990s. We use the Survey of Income and ProgramParticipation (SIPP) to examine a series of measures of householdmaterial hardship thatwere collected in the years 1992, 1995, 1998, 2003 and 2005.We stratify our sample to differentiate between the 1) deeply poor (b50% of poverty), who sawa decline in public assistance over this period; and two groups that sawsome forms of public assistance increase: 2) other poor households (50–99% of poverty), and 3) the near poor (100–150% of poverty). We report bivariate trends over the study period, as well as presenting multivariate difference-indifferences estimates.We find suggestive evidence that material hardship—in the form of difficulty meeting essential household expenses, and falling behind on utilities costs—has generally increased among the deeply poor but has remained roughly the same for the middle group (50–99% of poverty), and decreased among the near poor (100–150% of poverty). Multivariate difference-in-differences estimates suggest that these trends have resulted in intensified stratification of the material well-being of low-income households with children.

%B Children and Youth Services Review %V 34 %P 1810-1817 %G eng %9 Journal Article %0 Generic %D 0 %T Why do Mobile Interviews Take Longer? A Behavior Coding Perspective %A Timbrook, Jerry %A Smyth, Jolene %A Olson, Kristen %G eng %0 Generic %D 0 %T Working with the SIPP-EHC audit trails: Parallel and sequential retrieval %A Lee, Jinyoung %A Seloske, Ben %A Córdova Cazar, Ana Lucía %A Eck, Adam %A Belli, Robert F. %G eng