Embedding experiments within surveys has reinvigorated survey research. Several survey experiments are generally embedded within a survey, and analysts treat each of these experiments as self-contained. We investigate whether experiments are self-contained or if earlier treatments affect later experiments, which we call "experimental spillover." We consider two types of bias that might be introduced by spillover: mean and inference biases. Using a simple procedure, we test for experimental spillover in two data sets: the 1991 Race and Politics Survey and a survey containing several experiments pertaining to foreign policy attitudes. We find some evidence of spillover and suggest solutions to avoid bias
This paper shows how to use a randomized saturation experimental design to identify and estimate cau...
The extent to which survey experiments conducted with non-representative convenience samples are gen...
A small but growing social science literature examines the correspondence between experimental resul...
Embedding experiments within surveys has reinvigorated survey research. Several survey experiments a...
To what extent do survey experimental treatment effect estimates generalize to other populations and...
Researchers investigating causal mechanisms in survey experiments often rely on non-randomized quant...
Survey experiments are ubiquitous in social science. A frequent critique is that positive results in...
The accuracy of published findings is compromised when researchers fail to report and adjust for mul...
In the analysis of causal effects in non-experimental studies, conditioning on observable covariates...
In typical political experiments, researchers randomize a set of households, precincts, or individua...
This archive contains the data original posted by White et al. here: http://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/2...
Randomized experiments are becoming increasingly common in political science. Despite their well-kno...
In the social sciences, randomized experimentation is the optimal research design for establishing c...
Abstract: Are student subject experiment pools comparable across institutions? Despite repeated conc...
This study reports results from a new analysis of 17 survey experiment studies that permitted assess...
This paper shows how to use a randomized saturation experimental design to identify and estimate cau...
The extent to which survey experiments conducted with non-representative convenience samples are gen...
A small but growing social science literature examines the correspondence between experimental resul...
Embedding experiments within surveys has reinvigorated survey research. Several survey experiments a...
To what extent do survey experimental treatment effect estimates generalize to other populations and...
Researchers investigating causal mechanisms in survey experiments often rely on non-randomized quant...
Survey experiments are ubiquitous in social science. A frequent critique is that positive results in...
The accuracy of published findings is compromised when researchers fail to report and adjust for mul...
In the analysis of causal effects in non-experimental studies, conditioning on observable covariates...
In typical political experiments, researchers randomize a set of households, precincts, or individua...
This archive contains the data original posted by White et al. here: http://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/2...
Randomized experiments are becoming increasingly common in political science. Despite their well-kno...
In the social sciences, randomized experimentation is the optimal research design for establishing c...
Abstract: Are student subject experiment pools comparable across institutions? Despite repeated conc...
This study reports results from a new analysis of 17 survey experiment studies that permitted assess...
This paper shows how to use a randomized saturation experimental design to identify and estimate cau...
The extent to which survey experiments conducted with non-representative convenience samples are gen...
A small but growing social science literature examines the correspondence between experimental resul...