Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
W. Pollin, S. Perlin (1958)
Psychiatric evaluation of normal control volunteers.The American journal of psychiatry, 115 2
P. Wallin (1949)
Volunteer Subjects as a Source of Sampling BiasAmerican Journal of Sociology, 54
Frederick Mosteller, Q. Mcnemar (1946)
Opinion-attitude methodology.Psychological bulletin, 43
P. Himelstein (1956)
Taylor scale characteristics of volunteers and nonvolunteers for psychological experiments.Journal of abnormal psychology, 52 1
E. Howe (1960)
Quantitative motivational differences between volunteers and nonvolunteers for a psychological experiment.Journal of Applied Psychology, 44
S. Schachter (1959)
The Psychology Of Affiliation
R. Martin, F. Marcuse (1957)
Characteristics of volunteers and nonvolunteers for hypnosisInternational Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 5
W. Leipold, R. James (1962)
Characteristics of Shows and No-Shows in a Psychological ExperimentPsychological Reports, 11
R. Norman (1948)
A Review of Some Problems Related to the Mail Questionnaire TechniqueEducational and Psychological Measurement, 8
W. Cochran, F. Mosteller, J. Tukey (1953)
Statistical Problems of the Kinsey ReportJournal of the American Statistical Association, 48
P. London (1961)
Subject characteristics in hypnosis research. I. A survey of experience, interest, and opinion.The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis, 9
B. Lubin, E. Levitt, M. Zuckerman (1962)
Some personality differences between responders and nonresponders to a survey questionnaire.Journal of Consulting Psychology, 26
A. Maslow (1942)
Self-Esteem (Dominance-Feeling) and Sexuality in WomenJournal of Social Psychology, 16
R. Gagne, Dorothy Willner (1961)
Decisions, Values, and GroupsAmerican Journal of Psychology, 74
M. Rosenbaum, R. Blake (1955)
Volunteering as a function of field structure.Journal of abnormal psychology, 50 2
A. Siegman (1956)
Responses to a personality questionnaire by volunteers and non-volunteers to a Kinsey interview.Journal of abnormal psychology, 52 2
D. Marlowe, D. Crowne (1961)
Social desirability and response to perceived situational demands.Journal of consulting psychology, 25
T. Richards (1960)
Personality of subjects who volunteer for research on a drug (mescaline).Journal of projective techniques, 24
C. Bell (1961)
Psychological versus sociological variables in studies of volunteer bias in surveys.Journal of Applied Psychology, 45
B. Strickland, D. Crowne (1962)
Conformity under Conditions of Simulated Group Pressure as a Function of the Need for Social ApprovalJournal of Social Psychology, 58
P. Capra, J. Dittes (1962)
Birth order as a selective factor among volunteer subjects.Journal of abnormal and social psychology, 64
I. Scheier (1959)
To Be or Not to Be a Guinea Pig: Preliminary Data on Anxiety and the Volunteer for ExperimentPsychological Reports, 5
D. Brower (1948)
The role of incentive in psychological research.The Journal of general psychology, 39
R. Foster (1961)
Acquiescent response set as a measure of acquiescence.Journal of abnormal and social psychology, 63
H. Edgerton, S. Britt, R. Norman (1947)
Objective Differences Among Various Types of Respondents to a Mailed QuestionnaireAmerican Sociological Review, 12
N. Abeles, I. Iscoe, W. Brown (1954)
Some Factors Influencing the Random Sampling of College StudentsPublic Opinion Quarterly, 18
S. Schachter, R. Hall (1952)
Group-Derived Restraints and Audience PersuasionHuman Relations, 5
L. Lasagna, J. FELSINGER (1954)
The volunteer subject in research.Science, 120 3114
W. Belson (1960)
VOLUNTEER BIAS IN TEST-ROOM GROUPSPublic Opinion Quarterly, 24
M. Riggs, W. Kaess (1955)
Personality Differences Between Volunteers and NonvolunteersThe Journal of Psychology, 40
A. Frey, W. Becker (1958)
Some personality correlates of subjects who fail to appear for experimental appointments.Journal of consulting psychology, 22 3
A. Maslow, J. Sakoda (1952)
Volunteer-error in the Kinsey study.Journal of abnormal psychology, 47 2
R. Martin, F. Marcuse (1958)
Characteristics of volunteers and nonvolunteers in psychological experimentation.Journal of consulting psychology, 22 6
T. Coffin (1941)
Some conditions of suggestion and suggestibility: A study of certain attitudinal and situational factors influencing the process of suggestion.The Psychological Monographs, 53
S. Fr, Walters Rh (1961)
Anxiety, birth order, and susceptibility to social influence.The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 62
M. Rosenbaum (1956)
The effect of stimulus and background factors on the volunteering response.Journal of abnormal psychology, 53 1
F. Heilizer (1960)
An exploration of the relationship between hypnotizability and anxiety and/or neuroticism.Journal of consulting psychology, 24
H. Locke (1954)
Are Volunteer Interviewees RepresentativeSocial Problems, 1
R. Bellamy, H. Berkowitz, R. Blake, J. Mouton (1956)
Volunteering as an avoidance act.Journal of abnormal psychology, 53 2
E. Rosen (1951)
Differences between volunteers and non-volunteers for psychological studies.Journal of Applied Psychology, 35
R. Frye, H. Adams (1959)
Effect of the Volunteer Variable on Leaderless Group Discussion ExperimentsPsychological Reports, 5
E. Brunswik (1957)
Perception and the Representative Design of Psychological ExperimentsAmerican Journal of Psychology, 70
S. Perlin, W. Pollin, R. Butler (1958)
The experimental subject. I. The psychiatric evaluation and selection of a volunteer population.A.M.A. archives of neurology and psychiatry, 80 1
from the SAGE Social Science Collections. All Rights Reserved.
Human Relations – SAGE
Published: Apr 22, 2016
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.