Who's cheating on your survey? A detection approach with digital trace data

  • Munzert S
  • Ramirez-Ruiz S
  • Barberá P
  • et al.
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Abstract

In this note, we provide direct evidence of cheating in online assessments of political knowledge. We combine survey responses with web tracking data of a German and a US online panel to assess whether people turn to external sources for answers. We observe item-level prevalence rates of cheating that range from 0 to 12 percent depending on question type and difficulty, and find that 23 percent of respondents engage in cheating at least once across waves. In the US panel, which employed a commitment pledge, we observe cheating behavior among less than 1 percent of respondents. We find robust respondent- and item-level characteristics associated with cheating. However, item-level instances of cheating are rare events; as such, they are difficult to predict and correct for without tracking data. Even so, our analyses comparing naive and cheating-corrected measures of political knowledge provide evidence that cheating does not substantially distort inferences.

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Munzert, S., Ramirez-Ruiz, S., Barberá, P., Guess, A. M., & Yang, J. (2024). Who’s cheating on your survey? A detection approach with digital trace data. Political Science Research and Methods, 12(2), 390–398. https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2022.42

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