A randomized experiment evaluating survey mode effects for video interviewing

Authors

Endres, K; Hillygus, DS; Debell, M; Iyengar, S

Abstract

Rising costs and challenges of in-person interviewing have prompted major surveys to consider moving online and conducting live web-based video interviews. In this paper, we evaluate video mode effects using a two-wave experimental design in which respondents were randomized to either an interviewer-administered video or interviewer-administered in-person survey wave after completing a self-administered online survey wave. This design permits testing of both within- and between-subject differences across survey modes. Our findings suggest that video interviewing is more comparable to in-person interviewing than online interviewing across multiple measures of satisficing, social desirability, and respondent satisfaction.

Citation

Endres, K., D. S. Hillygus, M. Debell, and S. Iyengar. “A randomized experiment evaluating survey mode effects for video interviewing.” Political Science Research and Methods 11, no. 1 (January 1, 2023): 144–59. https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2022.30.

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