Dec. 13, 2007-Jan. 13, 2008 – Families and Technology
This survey contains questions about the role of technology in family life. It was used in our report “Networked Families”.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Pew Research Center makes the case-level microdata for much of its research available to the public for secondary analysis after a period of time. These datasets are listed below by collection date. A listing of our American Trends Panel datasets and religion datasets are also available. See this post for more information on how to use our datasets and contact us at info@pewresearch.org with any questions.
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This survey contains questions about the role of technology in family life. It was used in our report “Networked Families”.
This survey contains questions about the use of technology in the workplace. It was used in our report “Networked Workers”.
This survey examines the state of civic and political involvement in America, and the ways in which technology plays a role in civic engagement. It was used in our report “The Internet and Civic Engagement”.
This data set contains questions about cloud computing, online political activities and adult usage of online social networks. It was used in the reports “Adults and Social Network Websites”, “Use of Cloud Computing Applications and Services” and “The Internet and the 2008 Election.”
This data set contains questions about people’s personal discussion networks. It was used in the report “Social Isolation and New Technology”.
This data set contains questions about the internet and health care. It was used in our reports “The Social Life of Health Information” and “Chronic Disease and the Internet”.
This data set contains questions about how citizens used the internet to get political information and to interact with the campaigns during the 2008 presidential race. It was used in the reports “The Internet’s Role in Campaign 2008” and “Post-Election Voter Engagement”.