Web Survey Bibliography
This experiment addresses the impact of survey length and complexity on respondent fatigue and engagement. The working hypothesis is that a core group of panelists do not fatigue easily or benefit from seemingly more engaging survey enhancements, while the group that does is difficult to engage long term without drastically altering the subject matter. In short, one size does not fit all. Statistical models predicting engagement that leave out interactions between design elements and personality may be underspecified and lead to the wrong conclusions.
Conference Homepage (abstract) / (presentation)
CASRO Journal Homepage (abstract) / (full text)
Conferences, workshops, tutorials, presentations
Web survey bibliography - CASRO Journal (9)
- Picking up the Bread Crumbs: Holistic Insights from Social Media; 2014; Souda, P.
- Speed (necessarily) doesn't kill: A new way to detect survey satisficing; 2013; Garland, P., Chen, K., Epstein, J., Suh, A.
- Cyborgs vs. Monsters: Assembling Modular Surveys to Create Complete Datasets; 2013; Johnson, E. P., Siluk, L., Tarraf, S.
- Shorter Isn't Always Better; 2013; Burdein, I.
- The Measurement of Consistency in Online Research; 2012; Gittelman, S. H., Trimarchi, E.
- Thinking Differently About How to Select Respondents for Surveys; 2012; Terhanian, G., Bremer, J.
- Benefits of Modular Design for Mobile and Online Surveys; 2012; Kelly, F., Johnson, A., Stevens, S.
- Widening the Net: A Comparison of Online Intercept and Access Panel Sampling; 2011; Bakken, D. G., Nawani, R.
- The Effect of E-Personality on Research Results; 1997; MacElroy, B.