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Journal ArticleDOI

Examination of the Equivalence of Self-Report Survey-Based Paper-and-Pencil and Internet Data Collection Methods.

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TLDR
Overall, the findings show that paper-and-pencil and Internet data collection methods are generally equivalent, particularly for quantitative and qualitative equivalence, with nonequivalence only for some aspects of auxiliary equivalence.
Abstract
Self-report survey-based data collection is increasingly carried out using the Internet, as opposed to the traditional paper-and-pencil method. However, previous research on the equivalence of these methods has yielded inconsistent findings. This may be due to methodological and statistical issues present in much of the literature, such as nonequivalent samples in different conditions due to recruitment, participant self-selection to conditions, and data collection procedures, as well as incomplete or inappropriate statistical procedures for examining equivalence. We conducted 2 studies examining the equivalence of paper-and-pencil and Internet data collection that accounted for these issues. In both studies, we used measures of personality, social desirability, and computer self-efficacy, and, in Study 2, we used personal growth initiative to assess quantitative equivalence (i.e., mean equivalence), qualitative equivalence (i.e., internal consistency and intercorrelations), and auxiliary equivalence (i.e., response rates, missing data, completion time, and comfort completing questionnaires using paper-and-pencil and the Internet). Study 1 investigated the effects of completing surveys via paper-and-pencil or the Internet in both traditional (i.e., lab) and natural (i.e., take-home) settings. Results indicated equivalence across conditions, except for auxiliary equivalence aspects of missing data and completion time. Study 2 examined mailed paper-and-pencil and Internet surveys without contact between experimenter and participants. Results indicated equivalence between conditions, except for auxiliary equivalence aspects of response rate for providing an address and completion time. Overall, the findings show that paper-and-pencil and Internet data collection methods are generally equivalent, particularly for quantitative and qualitative equivalence, with nonequivalence only for some aspects of auxiliary equivalence.

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Citations
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Understanding clinical outcome in patients with pituitary disease : a biopsychosocial approach

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TL;DR: Patients with pituitary disease in a stable medical condition demonstrate persistent morbidity by using a biopsychosocial approach covering a continuum ranging from biological and physiological measures, to measures of general health perceptions, as described by the Wilson-Cleary model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Validation of an instrument to assess barriers to care-seeking for accidental bowel leakage in women: the BCABL questionnaire

TL;DR: The Barriers to Care-seeking for Accidental Bowel Leakage (BCABL) questionnaire, with 16 items mapping to six domains, has excellent criterion validity and test–retest reliability when administered electronically in women with ABL.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attitudes to meatless meals: A comparison of the general public and those with links to the agricultural economy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compare the attitudes to adopting meat reduction strategies within the general population and people with a link to agriculture to understand attitudes to meat reduction, cross-sectional self-administered questionnaires were disseminated using online fora, community groups and by attending agricultural marts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Personality Systems, Spirituality, and Existential Well-Being: A Person-Centered Perspective

TL;DR: This paper measured the influence of personality on the relationship between spirituality and existential well-being (EWB) from the perspective of personality system interaction theory, focusing on functional relationships between cognitive and affective systems, using Latent Profile Analysis.
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