"Web surveys can be programmed to capture a variety of paradata regarding how respondents answer questions. These paradata provide great opportunities for researchers to assess response quality, specifically whether respondents engage in satisficing - not spending enough effort to provide accurate responses. In particular, speeding (i.e., giving answers very quickly) has increasingly been used as an indicator for satisficing and low response quality. However, few studies have examined whether speeding actually leads to compromised response quality. To address this gap in the literature, the current study investigates speeding behaviors among Web respondents from a probability-based panel. We first identify and characterize respondents who s...
Abstract The use of the World Wide Web to conduct surveys has grown rapidly over the past decade, ra...
The increased use of smartphones in web survey responding did not only raise new research questions ...
In anticipating a high completion rate for web surveys, researchers must be attentive to the design ...
"Web surveys can be programmed to capture a variety of paradata regarding how respondents answer que...
Web surveys can be programmed to capture a variety of respondent paradata regarding how respondents ...
This paper addresses speeding, that is, “too fast” responses, in web surveys. Relying on the respons...
Abstract This paper addresses speeding, that is, “too fast ” responses, in web surveys. Relying on t...
"It is well known that survey respondents reduce the effort they invest in answering questions by ta...
It can be expected that interview speed and straight-lining tendency are related: a higher speed can...
This paper examines response times (RT) to survey questions. Cognitive psychologists have long relie...
The goal of this paper is to investigate the effects of forcing the respondents to slow down while a...
According to Krosnick's influential account, survey satisficing occurs when a respondent decides to ...
Response latencies answering to attitude questions can be used as a measure of chronic attitude acce...
The speed–accuracy trade-off (SAT) suggests that time constraints reduce response accuracy. Its rele...
This study investigates how an auto-forward design, where respondents navigate through a web survey ...
Abstract The use of the World Wide Web to conduct surveys has grown rapidly over the past decade, ra...
The increased use of smartphones in web survey responding did not only raise new research questions ...
In anticipating a high completion rate for web surveys, researchers must be attentive to the design ...
"Web surveys can be programmed to capture a variety of paradata regarding how respondents answer que...
Web surveys can be programmed to capture a variety of respondent paradata regarding how respondents ...
This paper addresses speeding, that is, “too fast” responses, in web surveys. Relying on the respons...
Abstract This paper addresses speeding, that is, “too fast ” responses, in web surveys. Relying on t...
"It is well known that survey respondents reduce the effort they invest in answering questions by ta...
It can be expected that interview speed and straight-lining tendency are related: a higher speed can...
This paper examines response times (RT) to survey questions. Cognitive psychologists have long relie...
The goal of this paper is to investigate the effects of forcing the respondents to slow down while a...
According to Krosnick's influential account, survey satisficing occurs when a respondent decides to ...
Response latencies answering to attitude questions can be used as a measure of chronic attitude acce...
The speed–accuracy trade-off (SAT) suggests that time constraints reduce response accuracy. Its rele...
This study investigates how an auto-forward design, where respondents navigate through a web survey ...
Abstract The use of the World Wide Web to conduct surveys has grown rapidly over the past decade, ra...
The increased use of smartphones in web survey responding did not only raise new research questions ...
In anticipating a high completion rate for web surveys, researchers must be attentive to the design ...