BarnetteW. Leslie. “The Nonrespondent Problem in Questionnaire Research,” Journal of Applied Psychology, 34 (December1950), 397–8.
2.
DonaldMarjorie N. “Implications of Nonresponse for the Interpretation of Mail Questionnaire Data,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 29 (Spring1960), 99–114.
3.
FerberRobert. “More on Bias in Mail Surveys,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 13 (Winter1949), 193–7.
4.
HansenMorris A. and HurwitzWilliam N. “The Problem of Nonresponse in Sample Surveys,” Journal of the American Statistical Association, 14 (December1946), 517–29.
5.
KemsleyW. F. and NicholsonJ. L. “Some Experiments in Methods of Conducting Family Expenditure Surveys,” Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, 123 (Part 3, 1960), 307–28.
6.
LarsonRichard F. and CattonWilliam R. “Can the Mail Back Bias Contribute to a Study's Validity?” American Sociological Review, 24 (April1959), 243–5.
PolitzAlfred N. and SimmonsWillard R. “An Attempt to Get ‘Not-At-Homes’ into the Sample without Callbacks.” Journal of the American Statistical Association, 44 (March1949), 9–31; 45 (March1950), 136–7.
9.
SchwirianKent P. and BlaineHarry R., “Questionnaire-Return Bias in the Study of Blue-Collar Workers,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 30 (Fall1967), 656–67.
10.
ScottChristopher. “Research on Mail Surveys,” Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, 124 (Part 2, 1961), 143–95.
11.
SimmonsWillard R. “A Plan to Account for ‘Not-At-Homes’ by Combining Weighting and Callbacks,” Journal of Marketing, 19 (July1954), 42–53.