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 Inviting You to a Conference: Open-Ended Coding
Posted by: Jon Krosnick
Title/Position: Professor
School/Organization: Stanford University
Sent to listserv of: SPSP, SESP, SPSSI
Date posted: November 3rd, 2008


The American National Election Studies (ANES) is pleased to invite you to attend a Conference on Optimal Coding of Open-Ended Survey Data, December 4-5, 2008, at the Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Many surveys include questions that are asked in an open-ended format. For such questions, respondents are not offered a discrete set of options from which to choose. Instead, respondents answer in their own words. To protect respondent privacy and to facilitate quantitative analysis, survey producers later code these open-ended responses by sorting them into discrete categorical variables.

Many researchers are asking important questions about the coding of open-ended responses. Some questions pertain to the properties of coding schemes. Other questions pertain to the procedures by which such schemes are implemented (e.g., how many coders to use and how to evaluate inter-coder reliability). Other questions pertain to documentation. There are, for example, numerous cases in which scholars who want to have debates about how to interpret coded responses cannot because surveys today tend to offer incomplete or inconsistent documentation of the coding properties and procedures described above.

Leading survey organizations, including the American National Election Studies, the General Social Survey, the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, and the National Longitudinal Survey are now seeking advice from a broad spectrum of experts about how to improve open-ended coding practices. To this end, they are co-sponsoring a conference on Optimal Coding of Open-Ended Survey Data at the University of Michigan on December 4 and 5, 2008.

The purpose of this conference is to bring together experts on systematic analysis of qualitative data and survey researchers to discuss options for improving conventional coding procedures implemented in the survey research world. Speakers and participants will include leading scholars from large-scale surveys, coding staff members from major survey organizations and scholars who have published and thought extensively about optimal procedures for coding open-ended text.

Confirmed speakers include:

Kristin Behfar, Paul Merage School of Business, UC-Irvine

David Fan, Department of Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development, University of Minnesota

Nigel Fielding, Department of Sociology, University of Surrey

Roberto Franzosi, Department of Sociology, Emory University

Klaus Krippendorf, Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania

David Repass, Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Connecticut

Roel Popping, Department of Sociology, University of Groningen

W. James Potter, Department of Communication, UC-Santa Barbara

Carl Roberts, Department of Sociology, Iowa State University

Fabrizio Sebastiani, Istituto di Scienza e Tecnologie dell'Informazione, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche

Paul Skalski, Department of Communication, Cleveland State University

We invite you to come to this conference and contribute to this broad interdisciplinary attempt to understand and improve best practices in open-ended coding. The registration fee, which includes all sessions plus breakfast and lunch on both days is $50.00. Space is limited to the first 50 people to submit their completed registration forms. For further information, please contact us at anes@electionstudies.org or visit our web site at:

http://electionstudies.org/conferences/methods/MethodsConference.htm

or

http://tinyurl.com/5wpsw9

Funded by the National Science Foundation and cosponsored by the American National Election Study, the General Social Survey, the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, and the National Longitudinal Survey.





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