Members of the Melbourne Institute's Household, Income and Labour Dynamics program undertake research into
longitudinal survey design and a variety of economic and social policy issues.
Not exact matches
The strongest research methods for psychological studies are: qualitative findings versus quantitative; experimental rather than descriptive or correlational; controlled - experiment, meta - analysis, and observation
designs over archival, case study, computational modeling, content analysis, field experiment, interview, neuroimaging, quasi experiment, self - report inventory, random sample
survey, or twin study; and prospective (where subjects are recruited prior to the proposed independent effects being administered) and
longitudinal (where subjects are studied at multiple time points) rather than retrospective or cross-section study.
Design, Setting, and Participants We used data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), a nationally representative, population - based
longitudinal survey of individuals in the United States 65 years or older from the 2000 (n = 10546) and 2012 (n = 10511) waves of the HRS.
Designed by two prominent academics, Sara McLanahan and Irv Garfinkel, the study is a
longitudinal survey of 5,000 low - income married and nonmarried parents conducted in 75 hospitals in twenty cities at the time of their child's birth.
This report adds to the current evidence base by using data from a large - scale
longitudinal social
survey designed to examine the characteristics, circumstances and behaviours of children from birth to late adolescence.
She explores these issues using diverse research
designs, ranging from interventions to basic experimental methods to
longitudinal surveys.