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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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SES: um sistema baseado na web para o design e a condução de experimentos educacionais

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that, in addition to the advantages already mentioned in the literature, web-based experiments can provide better control over several types of threats to internal and external validity in some types of scenarios.
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Development of Japanese version of the long-term mating orientation scale (LTMO-J)†

TL;DR: In this article, the authors validate the 7-item long-term mating orientation scale (LTMO) as translated into Japanese and find that the psychometric properties of the Japanese LTMO scale were comparable to those of the original English version.
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The Health of Women (HOW) Study®: a web-based survey of breast cancer risk factors, diagnosis, and treatment

TL;DR: The HOW Study® provides an innovative framework for collecting large amounts of epidemiological data in an efficient and minimally invasive way and can be leveraged to answer important questions about survivorship.

Measuring the impact of inquiry mode above and beyond situational characteristics and experimenter contact in research relating to self-reported sexual attitudes and behaviors

TL;DR: McCallum et al. as mentioned in this paper found that participants with higher levels of experimenter contact were more likely to report higher rates of reported sexual behavior, including higher frequency, a wider variety of behaviors, and higher rate of reported victimization and perpetration.
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The emoji current mood and experience scale: the development and initial validation of an ultra-brief, literacy independent measure of psychological health.

TL;DR: The emoji-based measure presented here provides an ultra-brief measure of mood and current experience, with minimal literacy demands on participants, and validity demonstrated through relationships to existing scales.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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