‘Short is Better’. Evaluating the Attentiveness of Online Respondents Through Screener Questions in a Real Survey Environment

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Abstract

In online surveys, the control of respondents is almost absent: for this reason, the use of screener questions or “screeners” has been suggested to evaluate respondent attention. Screeners ask respondents to follow a certain number of instructions described in a text that contains a varying amount of misleading information. Previous work focused on ad-hoc experimental designs composed of a few questions, generally administered to small samples. Using an experiment inserted into an Italian National Election Study survey (N=3,000), we show that short screeners – namely, questions with a reduced amount of misleading information – should be preferred to longer screeners in evaluating the attentiveness of respondents. We also show there is no effect of screener questions in activating respondent attention.

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Mancosu, M., Ladini, R., & Vezzoni, C. (2019). ‘Short is Better’. Evaluating the Attentiveness of Online Respondents Through Screener Questions in a Real Survey Environment. BMS Bulletin of Sociological Methodology/ Bulletin de Methodologie Sociologique, 141(1), 30–45. https://doi.org/10.1177/0759106318812788

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