
About the Survey
The
analysis in this report is based on telephone interviews conducted June 28-July
9, 2012, among a national sample of 2,973 adults, 18 years of age or older, living in all 50 U.S.
states and the District of Columbia (1,771
respondents were interviewed on a landline telephone, and 1,202 were
interviewed on a cell phone, including 596 who had no landline telephone). The
survey was conducted by interviewers at Princeton Data Source and Universal
Survey Center under the direction of Princeton Survey Research Associates
International. A combination of landline and cell phone random digit dial
samples were used; both samples were provided by Survey Sampling International.
Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish. Respondents in the landline
sample were selected by randomly asking for the youngest adult male or female
who is now at home. Interviews in the cell sample were conducted with the
person who answered the phone, if that person was an adult 18 years of age or
older. For detailed information about our survey methodology, see http://people-press.org/methodology/
The
combined landline and cell phone sample are weighted using an iterative
technique that matches gender, age, education, race, Hispanic origin and
nativity and region to parameters from the March 2011 Census Bureau's Current
Population Survey and population density to parameters from the Decennial
Census. The sample also is weighted to match current patterns of telephone status
and relative usage of landline and cell phones (for those with both), based on
extrapolations from the 2011 National Health Interview Survey. The weighting
procedure also accounts for the fact that respondents with both landline and
cell phones have a greater probability of being included in the combined sample
and adjusts for household size among respondents with a landline phone.
An
additional 511 interviews were conducted June 28-July 10, 2012, with
religiously unaffiliated adults by screening landline and cell phone RDD
samples (261 interviews) and by recontacting respondents from recent surveys
who had identified as religiously unaffiliated (250 interviews). These
interviews are used only when reporting on the religiously unaffiliated
(including the unaffiliated subgroups – atheist, agnostic, and those who
describe their religion as “nothing in particular”). For the RDD and cell phone
recontact samples, respondents were initially selected in the same way as
described above. For the landline recontact sample, interviewers asked to speak
with the person based on gender and age who participated in the earlier survey.
Once the selected respondents were on the phone, interviewers asked them a few
questions and then asked their religious affiliation; those who are religiously
unaffiliated continued with the remainder of the interview.
The
weighting procedure for the additional interviews with religiously unaffiliated
respondents used an iterative technique that included all of the parameters
described above. In addition, the weighting accounted for the oversampling of
unaffiliated respondents in the screened and callback samples, the type of
unaffiliated respondent (atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular”), as well
as gender, age, region and the 2012 presidential vote preference among the
unaffiliated. The parameters for the type of unaffiliated respondent and for
gender, age and region among the unaffiliated are based on combined data from
Pew Research Center surveys conducted from July 2011-June 2012. The parameter for the 2012 vote preference is
based on the vote preferences of unaffiliated respondents in the main sample.
Sampling
errors and statistical tests of significance take into account the effect of
weighting. The following table shows the sample sizes and the error
attributable to sampling that would be expected at the 95% level of confidence
for different groups in the survey:

Sample
sizes and sampling errors for other subgroups are available upon request.
In
addition to sampling error, one should bear in mind that question wording and
practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into
the findings of opinion polls.