Using data from a recent online survey that identified inattentive respondents using “trap questions,” we demonstrate that ignoring attentiveness provides a biased portrait of the distribution of critical political attitudes and behavior
In public opinion research, response latency is a measure of attitude accessibility, which is the ea...
In this paper, we examine rates of careless responding and reactions towards detection methods (i.e....
Virtually all political surveys of citizens ’ political behavior suffer from unit nonresponse. Typic...
Does attentiveness matter in survey responses? Do more attentive survey participants give higher qua...
Participant attentiveness may represent a major concern for all researchers using online self-report...
Participant attentiveness may represent a major concern for all researchers using online self-report...
Lucid, a popular source of online convenience survey samples, has seen a significant increase in ina...
Internet-based surveys have expanded public opinion data collection at the expense of monitoring res...
Inattentive respondents introduce noise into data sets, weakening correlations between items and inc...
Replication Data for: "Difficulty of Reaching Respondents and Nonresponse Bias: Evidence from Large ...
This paper reports on the relevance of attention checks for online panels, e.g., M-Turk, SurveyMonke...
These files constitute the replication materials for the article 'Taking the Time? Explaining Effort...
A person has nonseparable preferences when her preference on an issue depends on the outcome of othe...
Good survey and experimental research requires subjects to pay attention to questions and treatments...
This is the replication archive for "How robust is evidence of partisan perceptual bias in survey re...
In public opinion research, response latency is a measure of attitude accessibility, which is the ea...
In this paper, we examine rates of careless responding and reactions towards detection methods (i.e....
Virtually all political surveys of citizens ’ political behavior suffer from unit nonresponse. Typic...
Does attentiveness matter in survey responses? Do more attentive survey participants give higher qua...
Participant attentiveness may represent a major concern for all researchers using online self-report...
Participant attentiveness may represent a major concern for all researchers using online self-report...
Lucid, a popular source of online convenience survey samples, has seen a significant increase in ina...
Internet-based surveys have expanded public opinion data collection at the expense of monitoring res...
Inattentive respondents introduce noise into data sets, weakening correlations between items and inc...
Replication Data for: "Difficulty of Reaching Respondents and Nonresponse Bias: Evidence from Large ...
This paper reports on the relevance of attention checks for online panels, e.g., M-Turk, SurveyMonke...
These files constitute the replication materials for the article 'Taking the Time? Explaining Effort...
A person has nonseparable preferences when her preference on an issue depends on the outcome of othe...
Good survey and experimental research requires subjects to pay attention to questions and treatments...
This is the replication archive for "How robust is evidence of partisan perceptual bias in survey re...
In public opinion research, response latency is a measure of attitude accessibility, which is the ea...
In this paper, we examine rates of careless responding and reactions towards detection methods (i.e....
Virtually all political surveys of citizens ’ political behavior suffer from unit nonresponse. Typic...