Greetings! As the thread title suggests, I am conducting a survey that will (hopefully) show some correlation between household income and debt with frequency of playing games of chance (gambling, if you will). This data is being collected for a statistics class I am currently taking. Although this survey is not exactly scientific, the questions asked will be enough for the purpose of my project, and should be sufficient enough to show some correlation, broadly speaking.
The reason I chose the questions in the survey is actually a personal matter, as I've had issues with gambling in my family and, to a lesser degree, personally. Although this is an academic endeavor, curiosity is not absent.
Some notes.
1) This survey is conducted with US respondents as the target demographic, however I do accept and welcome non-US respondents.
2) The website I chose to host my survey (SurveyMonkey.com) may collect anonymous data (difficult to decipher legalese in the privacy statement), but there is no apparent way to avoid this without going around with a hat and survey fliers to collect this data.
3) All data collected is anonymous; no IP addresses, personally identifiable information, or location details are collected, nor does it require any input other than what is written on the survey.
4) Data submitted is encrypted.
5) Data collected will be analyzed and used in a project for my statistics class.
I understand that the survey asks questions that some may be uncomfortable answering (e.g. household income). If you do not feel comfortable answering any question in the survey, then please do not attempt to take it as I require all data points for the results to be useful.
With that out of the way, I only require 40 respondents, but the more the merrier for my project. Admin: If this is not allowed, I apologize in advance, and understand completely if this is deleted. I looked through the rules and found nothing explicitly against this. If all goes well, and people are interested, I will post my results once I've combed through and made sense of the data.
Here is the link to my survey:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/B5QSVX3
Thank you very much for your time if you choose to respond.