Abstract Pictures used to supplement survey questions can systemati-cally influence the answers obtained. Respondents react to the content of the image, giving higher-frequency reports when pictures of high-frequency events are shown and lower-frequency reports when pictures of low-frequency events are shown. The effects of pictures on responses are similar to those of verbal instructions (i.e., they produce an assimilation effect). Our results show that verbal and visual language both have independent effects as well as interact with each other. Verbal instructions have stronger effects than the visual effects produced by pictures, however, and can be used to counteract the visual context effects. We find that respondents pay more attentio...
"Instructional manipulation checks (IMCs) are frequently included in unsupervised online surveys and...
Each question on a self-administered questionnaire can be viewed as a group of visually presented co...
This paper addresses effects of picture–text congruence in the online environment on consumer respon...
In interpreting questions, respondents extract meaning from how the information in a questionnaire i...
In this paper, we show that in Web questionnaires verbal and visual languages can be used to create ...
Web surveys permit researchers to use graphic or symbolic elements alongside the text of response op...
We utilize and apply visual design theory to experimentally test ways to improve the likelihood that...
Does the opportunity to deliver visual instead of verbal stimuli of political knowledge to responden...
This article shows that respondents gain meaning from visual cues in a web survey as well as from ve...
Does the opportunity to deliver visual instead of verbal stimuli of political knowledge to responden...
We utilize and apply visual design theory to experimentally test ways to improve the likelihood that...
The quality of data collection on the Internet depends in part on potentially biasing surface charac...
Online questionnaires can easily be complemented by logos, graphics and images. Yet visual cues can ...
Due to recent scholarly attention to visual design, much is known about the effects that specific de...
This article shows that respondents gain meaning from verbal cues (words) as well as nonverbal cues ...
"Instructional manipulation checks (IMCs) are frequently included in unsupervised online surveys and...
Each question on a self-administered questionnaire can be viewed as a group of visually presented co...
This paper addresses effects of picture–text congruence in the online environment on consumer respon...
In interpreting questions, respondents extract meaning from how the information in a questionnaire i...
In this paper, we show that in Web questionnaires verbal and visual languages can be used to create ...
Web surveys permit researchers to use graphic or symbolic elements alongside the text of response op...
We utilize and apply visual design theory to experimentally test ways to improve the likelihood that...
Does the opportunity to deliver visual instead of verbal stimuli of political knowledge to responden...
This article shows that respondents gain meaning from visual cues in a web survey as well as from ve...
Does the opportunity to deliver visual instead of verbal stimuli of political knowledge to responden...
We utilize and apply visual design theory to experimentally test ways to improve the likelihood that...
The quality of data collection on the Internet depends in part on potentially biasing surface charac...
Online questionnaires can easily be complemented by logos, graphics and images. Yet visual cues can ...
Due to recent scholarly attention to visual design, much is known about the effects that specific de...
This article shows that respondents gain meaning from verbal cues (words) as well as nonverbal cues ...
"Instructional manipulation checks (IMCs) are frequently included in unsupervised online surveys and...
Each question on a self-administered questionnaire can be viewed as a group of visually presented co...
This paper addresses effects of picture–text congruence in the online environment on consumer respon...