학술논문

Video in Survey Interviews: Effects on Data Quality and Respondent Experience
Document Type
Zeitschriftenartikel
journal article
Source
Methods, data, analyses : a journal for quantitative methods and survey methodology (mda), 17, 2, 135-170
Subject
Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie
Social sciences, sociology, anthropology
live video survey interviews
video mediated interviews
video web surveys
pre-recorded video interviews
survey satisficing
sensitive questions
disclosure of sensitive information
Erhebungstechniken und Analysetechniken der Sozialwissenschaften
Methods and Techniques of Data Collection and Data Analysis, Statistical Methods, Computer Methods
Umfrageforschung
Interview
Video
Datengewinnung
Datenqualität
survey research
interview
video
data capture
data quality
Language
ISSN
2190-4936
Abstract
This study investigates the extent to which video technologies - now ubiquitous - might be useful for survey measurement. We compare respondents' performance and experience (n = 1,067) in live video-mediated interviews, a web survey in which prerecorded interview­ers read questions, and a conventional (textual) web survey. Compared to web survey re­spondents, those interviewed via live video were less likely to select the same response for all statements in a battery (non-differentiation) and reported higher satisfaction with their experience but provided more rounded numerical (presumably less thoughtful) answers and selected answers that were less sensitive (more socially desirable). This suggests the presence of a live interviewer, even if mediated, can keep respondents motivated and con­scientious but may introduce time pressure - a likely reason for increased rounding - and social presence - a likely reason for more socially desirable responding. Respondents "in­terviewed" by a prerecorded interviewer, rounded fewer numerical answers and responded more candidly than did those in the other modes, but engaged in non-differentiation more than did live video respondents, suggesting there are advantages and disadvantages for both video modes. Both live and prerecorded video seem potentially viable for use in pro­duction surveys and may be especially valuable when in-person interviews are not feasible.