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AAPOR Annual Conference Blog: Wednesday

05/14/2025

Thank you to Laura Young for her reflection on the first day of the Annual Conference.

“Before we start, I have one little organizational matter: this session is for questionnaire design lovers only.”

The tone for my first day back at this year’s AAPOR was set by the charismatic Danny Goldstein, moderator of the session on Question Order and Placement and Formatting. Needless to say, after an energizing fun run (or breathless jog, in my case), I was already pumped for my first 9am session within the first minute. Adam Kaderabek was up first, presenting the promises and pitfalls of complex grid structures in mail surveys with regards to skip patterns. He was followed by PhD candidate Çağla Yildiz, who dazzled with a natural experiment on plausible and implausible straightlining using GESIS panel data. Then, utilizing data from sixteen countries, Rona Hu impressed with a novel seemingly unrelated regression analysis on the effects of using “Select All That Apply” versus Yes/No question formats. The presentations ended strongly with Allyson Holbrook’s research on how response format and mode are associated with response order effects, which also made use of an experiment in Gallup survey. Down to the last second of the session, the audience engaged our speakers in the Q&A: How do we properly compare surveys with different formats? What do we consolidate the tradeoff between a reducing respondent’s cognitive burden and the many, many other requirements that a survey must fulfill? Right out of the gate, the AAPORites were thirsty for knowledge.

This engaged energy was only matched by the joint WAPOR/AAPOR opening plenary session. Moderated by Washington Post’s Scott Clement, this session examined how polls performed and informed during the 2024 election. Each of the distinguished speakers brought a distinct perspective and insight to the panel that made for a whirlwind experience that ended much too soon. Right away, University of Michigan’s Josh Pasek was quick to point out the elephant (donkey?) in the room: the 2024 election polls revealed a continued bias toward democrats. Our polls simply aren’t able to reach certain republicans, particularly if they indicate uncertainty in their voting preferences prior to elections. Brent Buchanan of Cygnal highlighted more important take-aways from this last election cycle: there are interesting differences in bipartisan voting behavior according to campaign spending and information flow. University De Montreal’s Claire Durand pointed out the highly fluctuating, inflated polling landscape in the US compared to Europe and Canada, and how this might contribute to both a greater variance in overall predictions, as well as a decrease in public trust in polling. As Becca Siegel, former senior adviser for Harris for President aptly put: polling easily identified where we have problems this past year; the difficulty is figuring out how to solve them.

Just after the plenary session, I dove into the main hall for the posters – one of my personal favorite parts of any conference! It was such a delight to catch a glimpse of so many different, fascinating projects. Among my favorites were two University of Michigan students: Chelsea Waddell’s research on public perceptions of traffic stops across race and gender, and Deji Suolang’s poster on how to handle missing contextual data in large-scale assessments. Meanwhile, Alexander Tripp from Vanderbilt University gave us surprising insights into the way local public opinion changes with exposure to immigration. Last but certainly not least, MARTA’s Alec Biehl and Chris Wyczalkowski got hands-on with five different survey forms that they used to assess transit rider experience. The poster session was packed, and while I only managed to speak with a few presenters, the entire hall was full of impressive, thoughtful work. I wish I had time to explore more, but it was so inspiring to see every single contribution acknowledged and valued with so many curious visitors.

My brain is buzzing from the first day – from all the casual hallway conversations and the motivation-method-results of formal talks. This is only my second time attending AAPOR, but it’s clear to me that this conference is so much more than an enthusiastic exchange of public opinion experts. It’s also a place where you reconnect with the friends you only see once a year (Hi Sunny!). And it’s a place where you realize too late in the Longitudinal Leisure Study Session that your PI is actually really, really good at poker.

Welcome back, AAPOR. I missed you.