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- Path: sparky!uunet!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!ai-lab!ai-lab!not-for-mail
- From: MIT Presidential Information Service <Surveys@campaign92.org>
- Newsgroups: ny.general
- Subject: Usage of Online Campaign Materials
- Date: 16 Nov 1992 13:54:41 -0500
- Organization: MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab
- Lines: 396
- Sender: daemon@ai.mit.edu
- Message-ID: <1e8qphINNhdb@life.ai.mit.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: life.ai.mit.edu
-
-
- Explanation: Please answer this survey as best you can and return it to:
-
- Surveys@Campaign92.Org
-
- Purpose: This survey is intended to measure the impact of computer
- networks in the 1992 Presidential Campaign, with particular reference to
- the MIT Information Service experiment. Your responses will help us
- assess the usefulness of these services and will inform future efforts
- of this type. The results of this third of four surveys will sketch
- your usage of email connections to the Presidential campaigns, and
- ascertain your views on several current questions of national
- information policy. We will post the results of this survey to the
- respondents when they become significant.
-
- Redistribution: If you redistributed on-line campaign materials to
- other people on the network, please also send this survey to them.
-
- Directions: Try to answer all the questions as best you can in order
- make this survey as accurate as possible. Be sure to put your answer
- AFTER the PROMPT for each query BUT NOT on a new line. You need only
- provide enough characters to distinguish your answer from the
- alternatives. For multiple choice questions with letter or numeric
- labels, you need only provide the letter or number for your answer. Be
- careful NOT TO DELETE the FORM IDENTIFIER and SPECIFIER appearing at the
- beginning of the survey, or the system will have trouble figuring out
- which survey you are submitting.
-
- If you are unsure how to complete this survey, you can learn how to fill
- out our computerized forms by sending mail to:
-
- Help@Campaign92.Org
-
- Eligibility: People who have interacted with this system or received
- on-line materials during the recent presidential campaign are eligible
- to participate.
-
-
- Comments: If you wish to register comments on this survey or other
- aspects of these experiments, you may send them to:
-
- Commentary@Campaign92.Org
-
- Duplicates: If you receive duplicate copies of this survey, you may be
- registered with this system under more than one email address. You can
- check on this by sending the subject line STATUS to
-
- Surveys@Campaign92.Org
-
- No Surveys: If you wish to receive no more surveys (there is one left
- to do), simply send the subject line REMOVE SURVEYS to
-
- Surveys@Campaign92.Org
-
- No Further Contact: If you wish never to hear again from this service,
- simply send the subject line REMOVE CONTACTS to Surveys@Campaign92.Org
-
- --------------------
-
- PLEASE DO NOT DELETE THE NEXT LINE!
- :FORM: SERVICE-USAGE
-
- Question: Do you consider yourself politically active?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :POLITICALLY-ACTIVE: No
-
- Question: Were you more politically involved in this campaign than in previous
- campaigns?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :MORE-ACTIVE: No
-
- Question: How would you describe your principal geographic location during the
- campaign, on a metropolitan to rural continuum?
- Answer: Select one of: 1 Metropolitan (over one million population)
- 2 Urban (less than one million population)
- 3 Metro-Suburban (near Metropolitan area)
- 4 Suburban (near urban area)
- 5 Rural Town (under 50,000 population)
- 6 Rural Village (Under 1,000 population)
- 7 Rural
- :LOCATION-TYPE:
-
- Question: If you were located in the United States during the campaign, in
- what state were you principally located?
- Answer: Unambiguous State name, or NONe (don't forget about North Dakota)
- Note that standard state abbreviations do NOT work here.
- :US-LOCATION:
-
- Question: If you are located in the United States, what is the zipcode
- where you vote?
- Answer: U.S. Zipcode or None.
- :ZIPCODE:
-
- Question: If you are located outside the United States, what country were you in
- during the campaign?
- Answer: Type the full name of the country on one line.
- :FOREIGN-LOCATION:
-
- Question: If you obtained obtain on-line campaign materials during the
- presidential campaign, did they come to you directly or indirectly via
- the MIT Presidential Information Service? You can tell by looking in
- headers of a message for the received from field, e.g., ``Received: From
- <host domain name>....'' Answer yes if you find any hosts whose domain
- name ends with the domain AI.MIT.EDU.
- Answer: Yes, No, or Unknown.
- :RECEIVED-FROM-MIT: Yes
-
- Question: Did you obtain on-line campaign materials during the presidential
- campaign? If so, please list the sources you used in DECREASING order
- of use. Rank the most often used sources first.
- Answer: Select some integers from:
- 1 FTP Sites
- 5 Mailing lists
- 6 Local Bulletin Boards
- 4 MIT Campaign Packages
- 2 Usenet/NETNEWS Discussions
- 7 Sent to me by a friend via email
- 3 MIT Campaign Distribution Lists
- 8 Don't know
- :RECEIVED-ONLINE-MATERIALS:
-
- Question: Did you print hardcopies of any on-line campaign materials?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :HARDCOPY: No
-
- Question: If you redistributed copies of the campaign literature, what
- distribution methods did you use?
- Answer: Select some letters from:
- C Recommended online sources to others
- L Distribution to class or lecture audience
- F Hand redistribution
- E Displayed/distributed hardcopy locally (e.g. work, school, churches, clubs)
- D Telephone canvassing
- A Personal use (immediate family)
- J Newspaper or radio in local area
- G Electronic distribution (PLEASE SEND THIS SURVEY TO THE SAME LISTS)
- H US Mail
- I Local campaign office
- K Major market TV or radio (more than 500,000)
- B Face-to-face discussion with others
- M Not applicable
- :SECONDARY-DISTRIBUTION:
-
- Question: If you redistributed copies of the campaign literature, how many people
- received any of the redistributed material?
- Answer: Select one of: 1 1 - 5 people
- 2 5 - 20 people
- 3 20 - 100 people
- 4 100 - 500 people
- 5 500 - 1,000 people
- 6 1,000 - 10,000 people
- 7 10,000 - 100,000 people
- 8 over 100,000 people
- :SECONDARY-AUDIENCE:
-
- Question: If you redistributed copies of the campaign literature, do you believe
- those people in turn redistributed the material, and if so, what
- distribution means do you believe they used?
- Answer: Select some integers from:
- G Electronic distribution (PLEASE SEND THIS SURVEY TO THE SAME LISTS)
- C Recommended online sources to others
- B Face-to-face discussion with others
- A Personal use (immediate family)
- F Hand redistribution
- L Distribution to class or lecture audience
- H US Mail
- D Telephone canvassing
- K Major market TV or radio (more than 500,000)
- E Displayed/distributed hardcopy locally (e.g. work, school, churches, clubs)
- J Newspaper or radio in local area
- I Local campaign office
- M Not applicable
- :TERTIARY-DISTRIBUTION:
-
- Question: If you redistributed copies of the campaign literature, to how many
- people do you believe those people in turn redistributed the literature?
- Answer: Select one of: 1 1 - 5 people
- 2 5 - 20 people
- 3 20 - 100 people
- 4 100 - 500 people
- 5 500 - 1,000 people
- 6 1,000 - 10,000 people
- 7 10,000 - 100,000 people
- 8 over 100,000 people
- :TERTIARY-AUDIENCE:
-
- Question: How carefully did you read the document that you read the MOST
- CAREFULLY?
- Answer: Select one: 1 Never looked at it
- 2 Skimmed it
- 3 Read it
- 4 Read it carefully
- 5 Debated the key points from it
- :READING-DEPTH:
-
- Question: Did the on-line campaign material help you decide how to vote?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :DECISION-EFFECT: No
-
- Question: Which presidential candidate did you vote for?
- Answer: Select one: 4 Andre Marrou - Libertarian
- 6 Other
- 1 George Bush - Republican
- 3 Ross Perot - Independent
- 7 Did not Vote
- 2 Bill Clinton - Democrat
- 5 John Hagelin - Natural Law Party
- 8 Not US Citizen
- :VOTED-FOR:
-
- Question: Did the on-line campaign material change your opinion of any of the
- candidates?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :OPINION-EFFECT: No
-
- Question: Did you try to change anybody's mind about any of the candidates?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :CHANGE-MINDS: No
-
- Question: Did you use electronic mail to successfully communicate with the
- headquarters of a presidential campaign?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :HQ-COMMUNICATION: No
-
- Question: Are you a member of any political organizations that
- engage in lobbying or advocacy activities?
- Answer: Yes or No.
- :ORGANIZATION-MEMBERSHIP:
-
- Question: Which campaign(s) put out material with more factual errors? List the
- campaigns in DECREASING order of factual errors, from most error-prone
- to most accurate. If you noticed no factual errors in the campaign
- literature, skip this question. If you believe a campaign made no
- significant factual errors, omit them from the list.
- Answer: Select some of: 2 Bill Clinton - Democrat
- 1 George Bush - Republican
- 3 Ross Perot - Independent
- 4 Andre Marrou - Libertarian
- 5 John Hagelin - Natural Law Party
- :FACTUAL-ERRORS:
-
- Question: How many hours per week on average did you devote to reading online
- campaign materials during the last two weeks of the campaign?
- Answer: Specify number of hours (an integer).
- :HOURS-READING: 0
-
- Question: How many hours per week on average do you spend viewing, listening to,
- or reading off-line news (conventional news sources)?
- Answer: Specify number of hours (an integer).
- :NEWS-HOURS: 0
-
- Question: How many hours per week on average would you devote to on-line policy
- discussions if the relevant government officials were participating?
- Answer: Specify number of hours (an integer).
- :GOVT-LISTENS: 0
-
- Question: Please list the media to which you generally pay any attention in
- DECREASING order of familiarity. Rank the most familiar media sources
- first. Omit any unfamiliar media sources.
- Answer: Select any letters from:
- G Foreign Broadcasts (e.g., BBC, VOA, other national services)
- I Network News (i.e., ABC, NBC, CBS)
- L CSPAN
- B Weekly News Magazines (e.g., Time, Newsweek)
- C Expert News Weeklies (e.g., The Economist)
- A Newspapers of Record (e.g. New York Times, Wallstreet Journal)
- M Local TV News
- P FTP Sites
- H Local Radio
- O Professional/Trade Publications
- Q Usenet/NETNEWS
- N Scientific Journals
- S MIT Information Service
- J Cable News (i.e., CNN, CNBC)
- D Foreign Newspapers (e.g., Le Monde, Manchester Guardian)
- E Local Newspapers
- F Public Radio (i.e., NPR)
- K Public TV (e.g., McNeil/Lehrer News Hour)
- R Mailing lists (e.g., clinton@marist)
- T Online Newspapers (e.g. Clarinet)
- :MEDIA-SOURCES:
-
- Question: Please order the media sources according to their focus on issues that
- concern you. List only the media familiar to you in DECREASING order of
- relevance for you. Rank the most relevant first.
- Answer: Select any letters standing for media sources.
- :MEDIA-FOCUS:
-
- Question: Please order the media sources according to their depth of analysis.
- List only the media familiar to you in DECREASING order of their depth
- of analysis. Rank the media with deeper analysis first.
- Answer: Select any letters standing for media sources.
- :MEDIA-ANALYSIS:
-
- Question: Please order the media sources according to their level of bias FOR or
- AGAINST a candidate. List only the media familiar to you in DECREASING
- order of their bias. Rank the media with greater bias first.
- Answer: Select any letters standing for media sources.
- :MEDIA-BIAS:
-
- Question: If you communicated directly with the headquarters of a campaign
- via email, what was the nature of your communication? If you did not communicate
- directly with headquarters, skip this question.
- Answer: Select any letters from:
- F Other activity
- C Complained about INTERNET usage
- B Critiqued policy positions
- A Asked questions for clarification
- J Reviewed resumes or recommended personnel
- E Failed to establish communication
- K Sought direction/advise from HQ for partisan activity
- H Imparted specialized knowledge or private information
- G Offered moral support, congratulations, or condolances
- L Supplied expert/technical services or advise
- I Proposed political strategy
- D Delivered insults or hate mail
- M Informed HQ about local campaign efforts
- :HQ-COMMUNICATION-NATURE:
-
- Question: Should future political campaigns use electronic mail
- to communicate issue positions and receive feedback from the public?
- Answer: Yes, No, or Unknown (don't know).
- :CAMPAIGN-EMAIL: Unknown
-
- Question: Should the U.S. Presidency use electronic networks to communicate policies
- and receive feedback from the public?
- Answer: Yes, No, or Unknown (don't know).
- :PRESIDENT-EMAIL: Unknown
-
- Question: Should the U.S. Congress use electronic networks to publish pending
- legislation, the Congressional record, and communicate with constituents?
- Answer: Yes, No, or Unknown (don't know).
- :CONGRESS-EMAIL: Unknown
-
- Question: Should the agencies of the U.S. Federal Government use electronic
- networks to publish government information and field questions or
- suggestions from the public?
- Answer: Yes, No, or Unknown (don't know).
- :AGENCY-EMAIL: Unknown
-
- Question: Should the full text of the Library of Congress as well as other
- government databases be available over electronic networks?
- Answer: Yes, No, or Unknown (don't know).
- :ONLINE-INFO: Unknown
-
- Question: Should the government charge on a per-use basis for the information
- resources made publicly available over electronic networks? Assume a
- fair, competitive price.
- Answer: Yes, No, or Unknown (don't know).
- :INFO-PRICE: Unknown
-
- Question: Would you use networked information resources significantly less if
- you, or your institution, had to pay for each transaction, billed like
- telephones? Assume a fair, competitive price.
- Answer: Yes, No or Unknown (don't know)
- :INFO-USAGE: Unknown
-
- Question: What would be the effects if the Federal Government spent billions of
- dollars to create newer, faster, more extensive computer networks and make
- available over those networks major new information resources, such as
- the Library of Congress and all major public databases?
- Answer: Select any letters from:
- L Quickens the pace of basic research
- K Provides crucial public goods that business cannot supply
- I Not relevant for industrial competitiveness
- H No effect on the way business is done
- O Stimulates advances in computers
- F No effect on basic research
- Q Usurps business opportunities from the private sector
- B Improves the quality of education
- G No effect on progress in computers
- D No effect on productivity growth
- P Strengthens industrial competitiveness
- E No change in the quality of education
- A Increases productivity
- J Opens vast new markets in information and knowledge services
- C Makes information access more uneven
- M Represents a wise investment for the 21st century
- N Spreads information rights more evenly
- R Squanders scare government resources on a boondoggle
- :INFO-VALUE:
-
- --------------------
-
- The Presidential Campaign Information Service is a non-partisan
- service operated at M.I.T to make campaign information available,
- facilitate electronic discussion of the issues, and to study the
- use of electronic mail as a component of a presidential campaign.
- The service can neither control who reads what you write in public,
- nor how they may use your written words. For our part, we store
- most messages, and we will make them available after the election
- for scientific study. Names and any other identifiers will not be
- released; they will be omitted or replaced with random symbols.
-
- Eric Loeb and John Mallery
- M.I.T. Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
-