When measuring preferences, discrete choice experiments (DCEs) typically assume that respondents consider all available information before making decisions. However, many respondents often only consider a subset of the choice characteristics, a heuristic called attribute non-attendance (ANA). Failure to account for ANA can bias DCE results, potentially leading to flawed policy recommendations. While conventional latent class logit models have most commonly been used to assess ANA in choices, these models are often not flexible enough to separate non-attendance from respondents' low valuation of certain attributes, resulting in inflated rates of ANA. In this paper, we show that semi-parametric mixtures of latent class models can be used to d...
Accounting for ignored attributes, or attribute non-attendance (ANA), in discrete choice experiment ...
The joint and alternative uses of attribute non-attendance and importance ranking data within discre...
The literature in discrete choice modelling is increasingly recognizing the existence of attribute n...
When measuring preferences, discrete choice experiments (DCEs) typically assume that respondents con...
When measuring preferences, discrete choice experiments (DCEs) typically assume that respondents con...
A growing literature, mainly from transport and environment economics, has started to explore whethe...
Funded by National Clinical Assessment Service (NCAS) and Institute of Applied Health SciencePeer re...
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Summary Not accounting for simplifying decision-making heur...
Not accounting for simplifying decision-making heuristics when modelling data from discrete choice e...
In this paper, we generalize existing approaches to the treatment of stated attribute non-attendance...
In this paper, we generalise existing approaches to the treatment of stated attribute non‐attendance...
This paper focuses on behavioural reasons underlying stated attribute non-attendance. In order to id...
With the growing interest in the topic of attribute non-attendance, there is now widespread use of l...
An extensive literature has established that it is common for respondents to ignore attributes of th...
In a discrete choice experiment (DCE), some respondents might not attend to all presented attributes...
Accounting for ignored attributes, or attribute non-attendance (ANA), in discrete choice experiment ...
The joint and alternative uses of attribute non-attendance and importance ranking data within discre...
The literature in discrete choice modelling is increasingly recognizing the existence of attribute n...
When measuring preferences, discrete choice experiments (DCEs) typically assume that respondents con...
When measuring preferences, discrete choice experiments (DCEs) typically assume that respondents con...
A growing literature, mainly from transport and environment economics, has started to explore whethe...
Funded by National Clinical Assessment Service (NCAS) and Institute of Applied Health SciencePeer re...
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Summary Not accounting for simplifying decision-making heur...
Not accounting for simplifying decision-making heuristics when modelling data from discrete choice e...
In this paper, we generalize existing approaches to the treatment of stated attribute non-attendance...
In this paper, we generalise existing approaches to the treatment of stated attribute non‐attendance...
This paper focuses on behavioural reasons underlying stated attribute non-attendance. In order to id...
With the growing interest in the topic of attribute non-attendance, there is now widespread use of l...
An extensive literature has established that it is common for respondents to ignore attributes of th...
In a discrete choice experiment (DCE), some respondents might not attend to all presented attributes...
Accounting for ignored attributes, or attribute non-attendance (ANA), in discrete choice experiment ...
The joint and alternative uses of attribute non-attendance and importance ranking data within discre...
The literature in discrete choice modelling is increasingly recognizing the existence of attribute n...