Appendix 4. AmeriSpeak Technical Overview

Appendix 4. AmeriSpeak Technical Overview.pdf

Generic Clearance for Survey Research Studies

Appendix 4. AmeriSpeak Technical Overview

OMB: 0536-0073

Document [pdf]
Download: pdf | pdf
TECHNICAL OVERVIEW OF THE AMERISPEAK® PANEL
NORC’S PROBABILITY-BASED HOUSEHOLD PANEL
Updated February 14, 2022
This technical overview provides the basic information about AmeriSpeak®, a large probability-based panel
funded and operated by NORC at the University of Chicago. AmeriSpeak is designed to be representative of
the U.S. household population, including all 50 states and the District of Columbia. U.S. households are
randomly selected with a known, non-zero probability from the NORC National Frame as well as addressbased sample (ABS) frames, and then recruited by mail, telephone, and by field interviewers face to face.
AmeriSpeak panelists participate in NORC studies or studies conducted by NORC on behalf of
governmental agencies, academic institutions, the media, and commercial organizations.
The construction of the AmeriSpeak Panel started in October 2014 with a pilot study to recruit the initial 400
households into AmeriSpeak. In 2015, 7,000 households were recruited from a sample of 60,000 addresses. In
2016, 128,000 addresses were sampled to expand the panel to 20,000 recruited households. For the 2017
panel recruitment,51,000 addresses were sampled, re The AmeriSpeak Panel expanded to 30,000 households
in 2018 and 35,000 households in 2019 through further recruitment efforts. The current panel size is 54,001
panel members aged 13 and over residing in over 43,000 households.
In addition to the regular panel for general population studies, AmeriSpeak also contains sub-panels to
support studies of special populations, including AmeriSpeak Latino, AmeriSpeak Teen, and AmeriSpeak
Young Adult (which features an oversample of African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians). AmeriSpeak is
also the probability sample source for TrueNorth®, the NORC calibration solution for combining probability
and non-probability samples for estimation through small area modeling that leverages data from
AmeriSpeak, the American Community Survey, Current Population Survey, and other data sources for
improved statistical efficiency. 1 AmeriSpeak is also the sample source for the Foresight 50+ Panel, which is a
partnership between AARP and NORC that provides a high-quality panel for organizations looking for
insights from older adults living in the United States. 2
Panel Sample Frame
The primary sampling frame for AmeriSpeak is the NORC National Frame, a multistage probability sample
that fully represents the U.S. household population. The National Frame is built using information from the
Decennial Census to support multiple NORC studies and AmeriSpeak Panel recruitment that involve inperson data collection. The current NORC National Frame is constructed using data from the 2010 Census;
however, it has been updated annually. For over 90 percent of the sample segments (see below), NORC uses
the U.S. Postal Service Delivery Sequence File (DSF) to update the addresses annually.
The primary sampling units (PSUs) are the 1,917 National Frame Areas (NFAs) that make up the sample
frame for the first stage of sample selection for a study or AmeriSpeak Panel recruitment. Each NFA is an
1
2

For more information about TrueNorth®, see http://amerispeak.norc.org/our-capabilities/Pages/TrueNorth.aspx.
For more information about Foresight 50+, see https://www.norc.org/Research/Capabilities/Pages/Foresight50.aspx

entire metropolitan area (made up of one or more counties), a county, or a group of counties with a minimum
population of 10,000. A total of 126 NFAs are selected in the first stage, including 38 certainty NFAs, 60
urban NFAs, and 28 non-urban NFAs. The largest 38 NFAs, those with a population of at least 1,543,728
(0.5 percent of the 2010 Census U.S. population), were selected into the National Frame with certainty.
Within the 126 selected NFAs, the secondary sampling units (SSUs) are segments defined from Census tracts
or block groups, where each segment contains at least 300 housing units according to the 2010 Census.
Within the certainty NFAs, a sample of 896 segments was selected using systematic PPS sampling, where the
size of a segment is the number of housing units. Implicit stratification was achieved by sorting the segments
by location (NFA, state, and county), principal city indicator, and by ethnic and income indicators. From each
urban and rural NFA, a sample of 8 and 5 segments was selected, respectively, using systematic PPS sampling
where the measure of size is the number of housing units per segment. A total of 618 segments are selected
from the non-certainty NFAs 3. Overall, a stratified probability sample of 1,514 segments was selected into the
National Frame in the second stage sampling.
Within the selected segments, all housing units are listed using the DSF. In the 123 segments where the DSF
coverage is deemed inadequate, the DSF address list is enhanced with an in-person field listing to improve
coverage. The final National Frame, consisting of all listed households in the sample segments, is estimated to
provide over 97 percent coverage of the U.S. household population. It contains almost 3 million households,
including over 80,000 rural households that are added through the in-person listing. In addition to NORC’s
National Frame, the DSF is used as a supplemental sample frame in four states. Although nationally
representative, the National Frame does not include households from Alaska, Iowa, North Dakota, and
Wyoming. Since 2016, the annual panel recruitment sample has included a small address-based sample from
these four states to assure AmeriSpeak presence in all U.S. states and Washington, D.C.
In 2017, an enhanced DSF frame was also used to develop a new Latino Panel with adequate representation
of Spanish-language-dominant Hispanics. Census tracts with a high incidence (at least 30%) of Spanishdominant Hispanics were targeted for this recruitment. Furthermore, within these Census tracts, households
that were flagged as Hispanic based on consumer vendor data (that are typically used for direct-mail
marketing) were oversampled.
Panel Sample Selection
For panel sample selection between 2014 and 2018 and in 2020, National Frame segments were stratified into
six sampling strata based on the race/ethnicity and age composition of each segment, as below:
•
•
•
•
•
•

Hispanic, high youth segments
Hispanic, not high youth segments
Non-Hispanic Black, high youth segments
Non-Hispanic Black, not high youth segments
Other, high youth segments
Other, not high youth segments

Hispanic segments are those where Hispanics make up at least a third of the population and the Hispanic
share in the population is greater than that of non-Hispanic Black. Similarly, non-Hispanic Black segments are
those where non-Hispanic Black make up at least a third of the population and the non-Hispanic Black share
in the population is greater than that of Hispanics. Finally, High Youth refers to segments in which 18-24year-old adults are at least 12% of the total adult population. The above stratification is used to oversample
A sample of 5 segments was selected from each of the 28 non-urban NFAs. However, 2 sample segments were later
subsampled out in Montana due to cost.

3

2

housing units in areas with a higher concentration of young adults, Hispanics, and non-Hispanic African
Americans. The resulting household sample is referred to as the initial AmeriSpeak sample or sample for
initial panel recruitment.
To support the second stage of panel recruitment, initially sampled but nonresponding housing units are
subsampled for a nonresponse follow-up (NRFU) 4. At this stage, consumer vendor data are matched to the
pending housing units, and housing units that are flagged as having a young adult 5 (18-34 years of age) or
minority (Hispanic 6, non-Hispanic Black 7) are oversampled for the NRFU sample. Overall, approximately
one in five initially nonresponding housing units are subsampled for NRFU using the same six sampling
strata defined above. Due to NRFU, these initially nonresponding housing units have a higher selection
probability compared to the housing units that were recruited during the first stage of panel recruitment.
A two-phase state-based ABS sample design was used for the 2019 AmeriSpeak recruitment. NORC’s
National Frame is designed to represent the U.S. household population nationally. At the state level, however,
the panel may have more significant clustering effects from the use of the National Frame, especially for
states with a small population. The primary objective of the 2019 design was to improve state-level
representation by selecting the recruitment sample mostly from areas that are outside the National Frame. A
stratified systematic sample was selected in the first phase, where each state constitutes a sampling stratum,
and the sample was allocated to the strata proportional to the square root of the state population. In the
second phase, young adults, Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black, and conservatives are oversampled based on
commercial data sources to improve their representation in the panel. Because the 2019 design did not use
NRFU face-to-face recruitment, the 2019 design did not involve geographic clustering.
In 2020 we returned to the “standard” sampling strategy employed in 2014 through 2018, with intentions to
conduct a robust NRFU. However, the COVID-19 pandemic prevented NORC from utilizing field
interviewers and the NRFU was limited to its usual first stage, a Federal Express mailing to 20% of the total
sample. After an analysis of state-level representativity after 2019 recruitment, it was determined that further
statewide representativity was needed in four states: WI, MO, WA, and CO. As such, statewide samples using
the USPS DSF file were generated for supplemental recruitment.
In 2021, NORC also recruited into an AmeriSpeak probability sample of persons aged 50 and older using a
random national consumer address file (estimated 96% sample coverage of all households in the U.S.).
AmeriSpeak empaneled approximately 6,000 study participants in this initiative.
It was clear at the start of 2021 that NORC would not immediately be able to conduct in-person interviewing
given the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. However, NORC sought to test new sampling strategies (noted
below) early in 2021 in the hopes of documenting their efficacy and continuing and improving on them for
the rest of 2021. Additionally, it was hoped that NORC would be able to conduct in-person interviewing in
the second half of 2021. As such, the 2021 recruiting sample was split into five replicates, the first of which
utilized DSF sample, and was released early in the calendar year, while future replicates were sampled using
the NORC National Frame and were held until mid-year for recruiting.
4 A small fraction of initially nonresponding housing units is not eligible for NRFU, including “hard refusals”
and those with an appointment for a call back from NORC.

A young adult flagged household refers to a household where MSG or TargetSmart indicated there was an 18-24-yearold adult in the household. In 2016 and 2017, a slightly different definition was used, and a young adult flagged
household was defined as having an 18–34-year-old adult in the household by MSG or 18–30-year-old adult by
TargetSmart.
6 A Hispanic flagged household refers to a household where MSG or TargetSmart indicated the presence of a Hispanic
adult in the household.
7 A non-Hispanic Black-flagged household refers to a household where MSG or TargetSmart indicated the presence of a
non-Hispanic Black adult in the household.
5

3

At the end of 2020, a major assessment of panel representativeness was conducted to inform the 2021
sampling strategy. This analysis again explored representativity by state, but as well explored a full range of
demographic variables. This analysis was conducted both with the full panelist dataset as well as by assessing
“effective panelists,” a measure of the likely demographic distributions that would occur among complete
cases in any typical AmeriSpeak survey. This analysis found that AmeriSpeak could benefit from additional
panelists in seven groups: households earning over $200,000, household with children, Hispanics, Hispanics
that specifically speak Spanish, African Americans, persons ages 18 to 24, and persons with less than a High
School education. As such, the sample was stratified using NORC Big Data Classifiers (Dutwin et al, 2022), a
technique utilizing available consumer and other public Big Data to make predictions on a range of
household attributes during survey sampling. Households predicted to be one of these seven attributes were
oversampled, while households predicted only hold persons aged 50 and older, or otherwise not predicted
hold someone with one of the seven attributes, were under sampled. This sampling method was tested in the
first sampling replicate, and given very positive results, was continued in all other 2021 replicates.
NORC’s strategy of “waiting it out” was effective, as the sample replicates released mid-year allowed NORC,
to wait for an effective “COVID window” to conduct in-person interviewing. In short, in-person
interviewing commenced after the peak of the Delta variant in 2021 and concluded with the peak of the
Omicron variants. NORC was able to conduct a full NRFU in-person effort during this time.
Panel Recruitment Procedures
AmeriSpeak Panel recruitment is a two-stage process: (i) initial recruitment using USPS mailings, telephone
contact, and modest incentives, and (ii) a more elaborate NRFU recruitment using FedEx mailings, enhanced
incentives, and in-person visits by NORC field interviewers.
For the initial recruitment, sample households are invited to join AmeriSpeak online by visiting the panel
website AmeriSpeak.org or by calling a toll-free telephone line (inbound/outbound supported). Both English
and Spanish languages are supported for online and telephone recruitment. The initial recruitment data
collection protocol features the following: an over-sized pre-notification postcard, a USPS recruitment
package in a 9”x12” envelope (containing a cover letter, a summary of the privacy policy, FAQs, and a study
brochure), two follow-up postcards, and contact by NORC’s telephone research center for sample units with
a matched telephone number.
For the second stage NRFU recruitment, a stratified random sample is selected from the nonrespondents of
the initial recruitment. Units sampled for NRFU are sent a new recruitment package by Federal Express with
an enhanced incentive offer. Shortly thereafter, NORC field interviewers make personal, face-to-face visits to
the pending cases to encourage participation. Once the households are located, the field interviewers
administer the recruitment survey in-person using CAPI or else encourage the respondents to register online
or by telephone.
Panel Recruitment Response Rate and Other Panel Statistics
A sample household is considered recruited or responded if at least one adult in the household joins the
panel. The weighted household response rate (AAPOR RR3) is about 6% for initial recruitment and 28% for
NRFU recruitment. We report two recruitment response rates: one for all the panel recruitment years (20142021) and one for the recruitment years with NRFU (2014-2018 and 2021). For all recruitment years, the
cumulative weighted household response rate is 21.9%; for recruitment years with NRFU, and the cumulative
weighted household response rate is 34.0%. 8 For client studies requiring a panel recruitment response rate
exceeding 30%, the sampling frame may be restricted to the panelists recruited in the NRFU years. The panel
8

As the 2021 NRFU is continuing to wind down, response rates noted here are estimated for 2021 sample cases.

4

recruitment response rate calculation methodology is consistent with AAPOR guidelines and fully
documented. 9 The annual panel retention rate is about 85%.
For individual client surveys based on the AmeriSpeak Panel, the AAPOR RR3 response rate is between 10%
to 20% depending on specific study parameters such as target population, survey length, time in the field,
salience of subject, and the like. This response rate takes into account panel recruitment rate, panel retention
rate, and survey participation rate. 10
Other important panel statistics with respect to the 2014-2019 and 2021 recruited households are as follows:
68% are recruited in the initial stage and 32% are recruited via NRFU; 92% of the active panelists prefer to
do web or online surveys, while 8% prefer to participate in telephone surveys; 16% of the recruited
households are non-Internet 11; 82% are cell phone only or cell phone mostly; 17% are African-American and
18% Hispanic; and 29% have household income below $30,000 (compared to CPS benchmark of 26%). 12
Impact of Non-Response Follow-Up
NRFU is instrumental in producing the industry-leading response rate for AmeriSpeak Panel recruitment.
Moreover, due to the more intensive effort, NRFU recruitments better represent hard-to-reach groups and
are therefore more representative of the target population. For example, initial recruitment tends to underrepresent young adults 18-34 years of age. NRFU recruitment corrects for this bias by bringing the age
distribution of the panel closer to ACS benchmarks.
Overall, NRFU recruitment significantly improves the representation of the panel with respect to
demographic segments that are under-represented among the respondents to the initial recruitment, including
young adults (persons 18 to 34 years of age), African Americans, Hispanics, lower-income households,
renters, cellphone-only households, and persons with lower educational attainment (e.g., no college degree).
To the extent that these demographic characteristics are correlated with substantive survey variables, NRFU
helps to reduce potential non-response bias in the sample estimates. NORC’s research indicates that NRFU
respondents are indeed somewhat different from initial respondents for many common survey variables. For
example, compared to the panelists recruited during the initial stage, NRFU panelists tend to be more
conservative politically, more likely to attend church, less interested in current events or topics in the news
report, less knowledgeable about science, less likely to be in favor of gun control policies, less likely to read a
print newspaper (more likely to read the news online and use social media), more likely to eat at fast-food
restaurants, and so on 13. These observations illustrate that NRFU recruitment is critical for achieving a more
9 See

http://amerispeak.norc.org/research/Pages/WhitePaper_ResponseRateCalculation_AmeriSpeak_2016.pdf
A properly calculated cumulative AAPOR response rate for panel-based research takes into account all sources of
non-response at each stage of the panel recruitment, management, and survey administration process (see
https://www.aapor.org/AAPOR_Main/media/publications/Standard-Definitions20169theditionfinal.pdf, page 48-9). A
common misapplication of the term “response rate” in online panel surveys is to represent the survey-specific
cooperation rate as the “cumulative survey response rate.” See “Response Rate Calculation Methodology for Recruitment
of a Two-Phase Probability-Based Panel: The Case of AmeriSpeak” authored by Robert Montgomery, J. Michael
Dennis, N. Ganesh. The paper is available at https://amerispeak.norc.org/research/.
11
The non-internet households (HHs) are those that do not select “High-speed, broadband internet at home (such as
cable or DSL)” or “Dial-up internet at home” response options when they are asked “What kind of internet access do
you have? Please select all that apply” item in the recruitment survey. The non-internet HHs include those that only use
internet on a cell connection or mobile phone.
12
For transparency purposes, unweighted percentages are presented in this section. Hence, these results do not take into
account selection probabilities. The base weighted distributions that take into account selection probabilities can be
provided upon request.
13 See “The Undercounted: Measuring the Impact of ‘Nonresponse Follow-up’ on Research Data and Outcome
Measures” authored by Ipek Bilgen, J. Michael Dennis, N. Ganesh. The paper will be soon available at
https://amerispeak.norc.org/research/.
10

5

balanced panel and for making the substantive estimates in AmeriSpeak studies more accurate. Even though
NRFU panelists are more reluctant to complete surveys, the addition of NRFU panelists reduced total
absolute bias on average 5 to 21 percentage points when compared to the initial stage recruits (among
examined surveys). 14
Mixed-Mode Data Collection
The AmeriSpeak Panel supports mixed-mode data collection to improve response rate and the
representativeness of the complete surveys. During the recruitment survey, AmeriSpeak panelists are offered
an opportunity to choose their preferred mode—web or phone—for future participation in AmeriSpeak
surveys. A recruited household can consist of both web- and phone-mode panelists. Panelists predominantly
prefer web over phone mode. As of November 2021, 93% of the active panelists prefer to do web or online
surveys, while 7% prefer to participate in telephone surveys. The telephone mode encompasses panelists
without internet access, panelists whose only internet access is via a smartphone, and panelists with internet
access but are unwilling to share an email address.
To the extent that non-internet households or “net averse” persons are different from the rest of the
population, mixed-mode surveys have better population coverage and produce more accurate population
estimates. NORC’s telephone interviewers administer the telephone surveys using a data collection system
supporting both the phone and web modes, providing an integrated sample management and data collection
platform. For panelists using smartphones for web-mode surveys, the NORC survey system renders an
optimized presentation of the survey questions for these mobile users.
Panel Management and Maintenance
Panel management and maintenance are crucial for panel health and efficiency. NORC maintains strict panel
management rules to limit respondent burden, reduce panel attrition, and minimize the risk of panel fatigue.
On average, AmeriSpeak panelists are invited to participate in client studies two to three times a month.
AmeriSpeak works with NORC clients to create surveys that provide an appropriate user experience for
AmeriSpeak panelists. AmeriSpeak will not field surveys that in our professional judgment will result in a
poor user experience for our panelists. AmeriSpeak also has a designated website and a telephone number for
panelist communications.
Panel maintenance is a dynamic process because the AmeriSpeak Panel is supplemented and refreshed
regularly over time to grow the panel, compensate for panel attrition, and improve panel representation for
specific subpopulations. For example, the Latino Panel and Teen Panel are created to support studies of
Hispanics and teenagers, respectively; the 2019 recruitment is primarily designed to improve sample
representation at the state level. As panelists are added or/and removed from the panel, the panel
refreshment process takes place to ensure that the refreshed panel fully represents the corresponding target
population.
ABOUT NORC AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
NORC at the University of Chicago conducts research and analysis that decision-makers trust. As a
nonpartisan research organization and a pioneer in measuring and understanding the world, we have studied
almost every aspect of the human experience and every major news event for more than eight decades.
Today, we partner with government, corporate, and nonprofit clients around the world to provide the
objectivity and expertise necessary to inform the critical decisions facing society. www.norc.org
See “Nonresponse Follow-up Impact on AmeriSpeak Panel Sample Composition and Representativeness” authored by
Ipek Bilgen, J. Michael Dennis, N. Ganesh. The paper is available at https://amerispeak.norc.org/research/.

14

6

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
To learn more about AmeriSpeak or to share an RFP, please contact AmeriSpeak at AmeriSpeakBD@norc.org. Information about AmeriSpeak’ s capabilities and research papers are available online at
AmeriSpeak.NORC.org.

7


File Typeapplication/pdf
AuthorStefan Subias
File Modified2023-03-01
File Created2023-02-03

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy