The anchoring vignette approach has grown in popularity as a method to ad- just for reporting heterogeneity in self-reported survey questions, removing bias due to systematic variation in reporting styles across study respondents. The use of anchoring vignettes, however, has been limited to surveys where both self-reports and vignette questions have been included. This diminishes their wider application. We illustrate, using an application to self-reported health in a large household survey, how externally collected vignettes can be used to adjust for reporting heterogeneity in datasets that have not included anchoring vignettes. Given that self-reported measures are an important facet of social, health and economic research, we anticipate ...
The authors investigate how reporting heterogeneity may bias socioeconomic and demographic dispariti...
In this article we employ the tool of anchoring vignettes to analyze gender differences in self-asse...
Systematic differences in the ways that people use and interpret response categories (differential i...
The anchoring vignette method is designed to improve comparisons across population groups and adjust...
This paper studies the pattern of non-random measurement error in self-assessed health responses acr...
When respondents use the ordinal response categories of standard survey questions in different ways,...
Methodologists (King et al. 2004; King and Wand 2007) have recently proposed a novel approach to adj...
textabstractAnchoring vignettes are increasingly used to identify and correct heterogeneity in the r...
Comparing self-assessed indicators of subjective outcomes such as health, work disability, political...
textabstractWe propose tests of the two assumptions under which anchoring vignettes identify heterog...
With the increasing popularity of cross-cultural research, researchers are facing a difficult proble...
Collection and analysis of self-reported information on an ordered Likert scale is ubiquitous across...
Abstract This paper studies systematic reporting heterogeneity in self-assessed health in India usin...
In this paper we explore solutions to a particular type of heterogeneity in survey data which is man...
The authors investigate how reporting heterogeneity may bias socioeconomic and demographic dispariti...
The authors investigate how reporting heterogeneity may bias socioeconomic and demographic dispariti...
In this article we employ the tool of anchoring vignettes to analyze gender differences in self-asse...
Systematic differences in the ways that people use and interpret response categories (differential i...
The anchoring vignette method is designed to improve comparisons across population groups and adjust...
This paper studies the pattern of non-random measurement error in self-assessed health responses acr...
When respondents use the ordinal response categories of standard survey questions in different ways,...
Methodologists (King et al. 2004; King and Wand 2007) have recently proposed a novel approach to adj...
textabstractAnchoring vignettes are increasingly used to identify and correct heterogeneity in the r...
Comparing self-assessed indicators of subjective outcomes such as health, work disability, political...
textabstractWe propose tests of the two assumptions under which anchoring vignettes identify heterog...
With the increasing popularity of cross-cultural research, researchers are facing a difficult proble...
Collection and analysis of self-reported information on an ordered Likert scale is ubiquitous across...
Abstract This paper studies systematic reporting heterogeneity in self-assessed health in India usin...
In this paper we explore solutions to a particular type of heterogeneity in survey data which is man...
The authors investigate how reporting heterogeneity may bias socioeconomic and demographic dispariti...
The authors investigate how reporting heterogeneity may bias socioeconomic and demographic dispariti...
In this article we employ the tool of anchoring vignettes to analyze gender differences in self-asse...
Systematic differences in the ways that people use and interpret response categories (differential i...