Social desirability bias in candidate conjoint experiments: What is the optimal design when studying sensitive topics?
Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
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Social desirability bias in candidate conjoint experiments : What is the optimal design when studying sensitive topics? / Dahl, Malte .
Department of Political Sceince, University of Copenhagen, 2018.Publikation: Working paper › Forskning
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RIS
TY - UNPB
T1 - Social desirability bias in candidate conjoint experiments
T2 - What is the optimal design when studying sensitive topics?
AU - Dahl, Malte
PY - 2018/9
Y1 - 2018/9
N2 - An often-mentioned advantage of conjoint experiments over traditional survey experimental designs is that the former have the potential to mitigate social desirability bias. To what extent this is true may depend on a number of design choices -- a concern that has received surprisingly little empirical attention. I conducted two studies in which I randomly assigned respondents to three types of conjoint designs in order to manipulate their awareness to sensitive features and possibilities for justifying inappropriate answers (N = 7,059). The results show that design variations signicantly affect respondents' inferences about the research objective. However, there are no detectable differences between respondents' preferences across designs. This indicates that researchers using conjoint experiments should not compromise their choice of design to avoid social desirability bias.
AB - An often-mentioned advantage of conjoint experiments over traditional survey experimental designs is that the former have the potential to mitigate social desirability bias. To what extent this is true may depend on a number of design choices -- a concern that has received surprisingly little empirical attention. I conducted two studies in which I randomly assigned respondents to three types of conjoint designs in order to manipulate their awareness to sensitive features and possibilities for justifying inappropriate answers (N = 7,059). The results show that design variations signicantly affect respondents' inferences about the research objective. However, there are no detectable differences between respondents' preferences across designs. This indicates that researchers using conjoint experiments should not compromise their choice of design to avoid social desirability bias.
KW - Faculty of Social Sciences
M3 - Working paper
BT - Social desirability bias in candidate conjoint experiments
PB - Department of Political Sceince, University of Copenhagen
ER -
ID: 203378029