This article investigates the impact of two data collection modes (online surveys and paper-and-pencil surveys) and the perceived attractiveness of the experimenter on two types of response biases: social desirability and demand artifacts. Its results highlight the combined effect of the data collection mode and the perceived attractiveness of the experimenter on social desirability and show that signs sensitivity and signs interpretation (two types of demand artifacts) are stronger in the context of online surveys than in the context of paper-and-pencil surveys.ou
Participant biases are a well-documented part of psychological research, and accounting for common b...
In recent years many universities switched from paper- to online-based student evaluation of teachin...
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of two web survey designs on the response time...
This article investigates the impact of two data collection modes (online surveys and paper-and-penc...
Abstract Although it is well established that self-administered ques-tionnaires tend to yield fewer ...
Social desirability responding (SDR) on surveys administered on the World Wide Web and on paper was ...
The aim of this meta-analysis was to compare social desirability scores between paper and computer s...
Year (YFCY), a national survey of first-year college students, this study was designed to examine bo...
Background: In educational research, online survey has become one of the most popular methods of dat...
This paper compares two modes of administering an election survey: a traditional, door-to-door surve...
This paper examines whether interviewer presence and survey mode affect the sensitivity of questions...
The literature on response effects suggests that different survey modes may influence how people res...
This paper examines whether interviewer presence and survey mode affect the sensitivity of questions...
Attempts to detect socially desirable responding bias have mainly focused on studies that explore se...
Over the past decade, an increasing number of scholars and professionals have turned to the Internet...
Participant biases are a well-documented part of psychological research, and accounting for common b...
In recent years many universities switched from paper- to online-based student evaluation of teachin...
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of two web survey designs on the response time...
This article investigates the impact of two data collection modes (online surveys and paper-and-penc...
Abstract Although it is well established that self-administered ques-tionnaires tend to yield fewer ...
Social desirability responding (SDR) on surveys administered on the World Wide Web and on paper was ...
The aim of this meta-analysis was to compare social desirability scores between paper and computer s...
Year (YFCY), a national survey of first-year college students, this study was designed to examine bo...
Background: In educational research, online survey has become one of the most popular methods of dat...
This paper compares two modes of administering an election survey: a traditional, door-to-door surve...
This paper examines whether interviewer presence and survey mode affect the sensitivity of questions...
The literature on response effects suggests that different survey modes may influence how people res...
This paper examines whether interviewer presence and survey mode affect the sensitivity of questions...
Attempts to detect socially desirable responding bias have mainly focused on studies that explore se...
Over the past decade, an increasing number of scholars and professionals have turned to the Internet...
Participant biases are a well-documented part of psychological research, and accounting for common b...
In recent years many universities switched from paper- to online-based student evaluation of teachin...
The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of two web survey designs on the response time...