{"id":184765,"date":"2011-11-01T13:00:26","date_gmt":"2011-11-01T13:00:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/staging.rm.gfolkdev.net\/?p=184765"},"modified":"2022-10-13T12:54:22","modified_gmt":"2022-10-13T12:54:22","slug":"survey-book-of-the-month-october-2011","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rosenfeldmedia.com\/survey-book-of-the-month-october-2011\/","title":{"rendered":"Survey book of the month, October 2011"},"content":{"rendered":"

Which is better: an open question or a closed one? Should you include a “don’t know” option in your closed questions? Is there a “right” order for asking questions?<\/p>\n

If topics like these concern you, then you’ll want to read my choice for this month:<\/p>\n

Questions and Answers in Attitude Surveys: Experiments on Question Form, Wording, and Context<\/a> by Howard Schuman and Stanley Presser. (1996,  reprinted in 1981)<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

A shortcut into the research literature<\/h4>\n

Although this book hasn’t been updated since 1996, it continues to be much-cited. Why? Because the authors conducted a series of experiments on different ways of asking questions, and then report on all of them in this one convenient volume. They also reviewed a swathe of the relevant literature. So it’s a sort of shortcut into the research on question wording from the 1950s to 1990s, an era where much research was done that is still relevant today, but the papers are often hard to get hold of.<\/p>\n

In UX, we often suffer from reports of exactly one experiment in a limited context with a small, unrepresentative group of participants that are then offered up as ‘fact’ as if they applied to everyone. If you, too, find that sort of over-large claim highly irritating, then you’ll enjoy reading this book. It’s full of examples where the authors tried to probe and replicate. Often, they
\nfound that an early compelling result didn’t actually replicate as they hoped – which
\nsometimes means they are less than conclusive in their recommendations, but far more
\nrealistic. <\/p>\n

One to borrow rather than buy?<\/h4>\n

I have to admit it’s not exactly a zippy read. If you’re a regular reader of the type of
\nacademic papers that quote a lot of ‘p’ values, then you’ll probably rattle along. But even so, you’ll need to exert some imagination. The examples are obviously all from an earlier era, and many of them explore political problems that are now no longer part of our everyday concerns. <\/p>\n

So I’m going to pull out some of the key findings for you here. <\/p>\n

The order of the questions is important<\/h4>\n

The first topic they tackle in depth is question order. There are some famous experiments that manipulated question order, such as with these two items:<\/p>\n

    \n
  1. Do you think the United States whould let Communist newspaper reporters from other countries come in here and send back to their papers the news as they see it? (“Communist” item)<\/li>\n
  2. Do you think a Communist country like Russia should let American newspaper reporters come in and send back to America the news at they see it? (“American” item)<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    (I told you these examples are often from eras when concerns were different). These were first used in an experiment in 1948, then replicated by the authors. In both cases, asking the Communist item first got a much lower level of ‘yes’ answers than if the American item was asked first. <\/p>\n

    This is a ‘context order effect’, also known as a ‘context effect’. Each question is affected by the context within which it is asked, and that context includes the previous question. <\/p>\n

    The problem with context order effects is that although they undoubtedly exist, they are tricky and slippery. The authors tried various different experiments to try to pin them down, but failed: they certainly replicated some effects, but not others; they found effects that were larger than expected, and others that were smaller. They found no straightforward explanation for what might be going on. <\/p>\n

    As the authors put it in their summing up of the chapter:<\/p>\n

    “[Context  effects] can be very large [and] are difficult to predict”. <\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

    <\/p>\n

    The bottom line: question order is important. If you want to run the same survey again and plan to compare the results, make sure that you keep the question order the same each time.<\/p>\n

    Open questions elicit a wider range of answers, but are not as open as they seem
    \n<\/h4>\n

    Closed questions are ones where the respondent has to pick from a range of specific answers, sometimes including ‘don’t know’ and ‘prefer not to answer’. Open questions have an open space for the answers and respondents can choose to provide as short or long an answer as they wish.<\/p>\n

    The chapter on open versus closed questions reports on experiments that compared the number and range of answers that each type of question can elicit. Broadly, an open question will collect a much wider selection of answers including some that you would never have guessed you’d get. <\/p>\n

    Unfortunately, open questions also pose problems for analysis, because you’ve got to read the answers and try to put them into categories yourself: and in doing that, there’s a risk of misinterpreting the respondent’s original intention. <\/p>\n

    But closed questions have their own problems, as I’m sure you’ll recognise if you’ve had the experience of trying to respond to a survey where the survey author continually forced you to choose from answers that don’t resemble the one you want to give. <\/p>\n

    Here’s how the authors sum up the issues:<\/p>\n

    “Inadvertent phrasing of the open question itself can constrain responses in unintended ways … we can see no way to discover subtle constraints of this kind except by including systematic open-closed comparisons when an investigator begins development of a new question on values and problems”<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

    <\/p>\n

    Their recommendation about how to get the balance of open and closed questions right? Iteration! In other words:<\/p>\n