TY - JOUR AU - KATZ, DANIEL AB - Abstract Interviewers as members of the society which they study may themselves be a source of bias in public opinion studies. The experiment1 here reported compared the findings of white-collar interviewers of the American Institute of Public Opinion with the findings of working-class interviewers. Though both interviewing staffsworked under the same instructions they did not find the same public sentiment on labor and war issues. The author, an associate professor of psychology at Princeton University, is a member of the Princeton Office of Public Opinion Research. This content is only available as a PDF. © 1942, the American Association for Public Opinion Research TI - DO INTERVIEWERS BIAS POLL RESULTS? JF - Public Opinion Quarterly DO - 10.1086/265548 DA - 1942-01-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/do-interviewers-bias-poll-results-E2BdIhr5Dy SP - 248 EP - 268 VL - 6 IS - 2 DP - DeepDyve ER -