Deck 15: Survey Research

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Question
Name the two purposes of surveys. Briefly describe a study that uses each of these purposes.
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Question
Distinguish between sample surveys and convenience surveys.
Question
Distinguish between open-ended and closed-ended survey questions. Explain why a researcher would choose one type over the other when constructing a survey.
Question
Describe three factors a researcher should consider when wording survey questions.
Question
Describe one of the ways in which researchers can assess how well potential respondents understand survey questions.
Question
What are double-barreled questions? Give an example of one.
Question
What are leading questions and loaded questions? Give an example of each.
Question
Give an example of a survey question that makes an unfounded assumption.
Question
What is a sensitive question? Describe two factors that make survey questions sensitive.
Question
How might the sensitivity of a question affect people's responses to it? Describe two steps researchers can take to avoid these effects.
Question
What is meant by the term "level of measurement"? Name and define the levels of measurement from highest to lowest.
Question
What is the most important difference between interval and ratio levels of measurement?
Question
Explain how the difference between interval and ratio levels of measurement affects the interpretation of group differences based on those levels of measurement.
Question
Explain the relationship between level of measurement and the use of statistical tests.
Question
What is the robustness of a statistic?
Question
Explain how a measure's ecological validity is related to its level of measurement. Give an example.
Question
Describe the two methods of comparative scaling. What three conditions must be met to achieve reliable and valid results using this procedure?
Question
Describe the characteristics of an itemized rating scale.
Question
What are graphic rating scales and how are they scored?
Question
Describe the characteristics of an itemized rating scale.
Question
What factors should be considered in determining the number of scale points used for a numerical rating scale?
Question
Describe two advantages of using intermediate anchors for a numerical rating scale.
Question
Explain how preliminary research using open-ended questions can be used to improve the content validity of itemized rating scales.
Question
Describe two advantages of using multi-item scales.
Question
Describe the process of developing a Likert scale.
Question
Name three advantages of using a Likert scale compared to other types of scales.
Question
What is reverse scoring?
Question
Describe the process of developing a Thurstone scale. Give two reasons why a Thurstone rating scale is rarely used.
Question
What is a Guttman scale? Why are Guttman scales rarely used?
Question
What is a semantic differential scale and why is it widely used?
Question
What is response bias and how does it relate to measurement error?
Question
What is scale ambiguity and how does it produce response bias?
Question
What is category anchoring and how does it affect people's responses to scale items?
Question
What are estimation biases? Give an example.
Question
What are primacy and recency effects? When is each most likely to affect responses?
Question
Define social desirability response bias and name the two forms it can take.
Question
What is the acquiescence response bias and what steps can a researcher take to reduce the possibility that this bias is operating?
Question
What is the extremity response bias? Why is it difficult to control?
Question
What are cultural response sets? How might they affect interpretation of research results?
Question
What is the reference group effect?
Question
Explain the literal interpretation fallacy.
Question
Describe three characteristics that indicate good questionnaire design.
Question
Describe the factors that researchers should consider when sequencing the questions on a survey.
Question
How might question context affect responses to survey questions? What question characteristics are most likely to produce context effects?
Question
Describe four factors to consider when constructing the physical layout of a survey.
Question
Name and define the three categories of survey instructions.
Question
Describe two characteristics of high quality survey instructions.
Question
Give an example of instructions that might bias the survey results. Then explain how this bias could be removed from those instructions.
Question
Explain why using existing measures is preferable to developing a new measure. What considerations are important when combining existing measures in a questionnaire?
Question
Describe the advantages and limitations of group-administered surveys.
Question
Describe the advantages and limitations of using online surveys.
Question
Describe two methods of recruiting participants for online surveys.
Question
Describe two techniques that can be used to increase survey response rates.
Question
Describe the advantages and limitations of telephone interviews.
Question
Describe the advantages and limitations of conducting in-person interviews.
Question
Which method of data collection is most likely to induce a social desirability response bias? Which method is least likely? Explain your reasoning.
Question
Which of the following is a population parameter?

A) the proportion of U.S. residents age 65 and older
B) the mean age of a group of college student research participants
C) the correlation between age and attitudes toward nuclear power in a group of research participants recruited at a shopping mall
D) the standard deviation of the ages of a group of research participants recruited from church groups
Question
________ surveys are the best way of estimating population parameters.

A) Convenience
B) Internet
C) Sample
D) Quota
Question
________ surveys are based on a representative cross-section of the population of interest.

A) Internet
B) Quota
C) Convenience
D) Sample
Question
________ surveys are based on the group or groups of participants that are readily available to the researcher.

A) Internet
B) Quota
C) Convenience
D) Sample
Question
Which of the following statements about types of surveys is TRUE?

A) The data from sample surveys can be used to estimate population parameters but not to test hypotheses.
B) The data from convenience surveys can be used to test hypotheses but not to estimate population parameters.
C) There is essentially no difference between sample surveys and convenience surveys in the way in which participants are recruited.
D) Psychological researchers are more likely to use sample surveys than convenience surveys.
Question
Consider the following survey question: "Under what circumstances should the university raise tuition?" This question can be categorized as

A) open-ended
B) stem-based
C) closed-ended
D) acquiescent
Question
Consider the following survey item: "The university should not raise tuition under any circumstances" with these responses options: Strongly Agree, Agree, Disagree, or Strongly Disagree. This item can be categorized as

A) open-ended
B) stem-based
C) closed-ended
D) acquiescent
Question
Which of the following statements about open-ended versus closed-ended questions is FALSE?

A) The responses to open-ended questions are more easily quantified.
B) Open-ended questions are generally better to use when asking about the frequency of sensitive or socially disapproved behaviors.
C) Responses to open-ended questions can be used to design response options for closed-ended questions.
D) Open-ended questions are more useful when one is unsure of the appropriate response options to use with closed-ended questions.
Question
Consider the following survey item stem: "Polysyllabic and Latinate verbiage obfuscates signification." This stem violates the question-writing rule of

A) avoid unnecessary negatives.
B) use the language of research participants.
C) avoid double-barreled questions.
D) be specific.
Question
Consider the following survey item stem: "People who do not speak English well should not be allow to teach in college." This stem violates the question-writing rule of

A) avoid unnecessary negatives.
B) use the language of research participants.
C) avoid double-barreled questions.
D) be specific.
Question
To determine whether respondents are likely to misunderstand or misinterpret a survey question, researchers should

A) use their own judgment based on their knowledge of the intended participant population.
B) use only items that were used in previous surveys.
C) pretest the questions to determine how well potential respondents understand them.
D) use only open-ended questions.
Question
A double-barreled question

A) includes two negatives.
B) implies that a certain response is desired.
C) uses emotional context to evoke a desired response.
D) asks for two or more pieces of information at the same time.
Question
A loaded question

A) includes two negatives.
B) includes high-level vocabulary words.
C) uses emotional context to evoke a desired response.
D) asks for two or more pieces of information at the same time.
Question
A leading question

A) includes two negatives.
B) implies that a certain response is desired.
C) uses emotional context to evoke a desired response.
D) asks for two or more pieces of information at the same time.
Question
Consider the following survey item stem: "My teacher speaks clearly and explains things well." This stem would be classified as being part of a(n) ________ question.

A) loaded
B) leading
C) double-barreled
D) insufficiently specific
Question
Consider the following survey item stem: "Do you agree that the state legislature should spend more money on education?" This stem would be classified as being part of a(n) ________ question.

A) loaded
B) leading
C) double-barreled
D) insufficiently specific
Question
Consider the following survey item stem: "Do you agree or disagree that labor unions should be prohibited from forcing their members to support undesirable political candidates?" This stem would be classified as a(n) ________ question.

A) loaded
B) leading
C) double-barreled
D) insufficiently specific
Question
When writing questionnaire items, one should

A) ask questions that are as specific as possible.
B) avoid making assumptions about respondents' personal characteristics or beliefs.
C) be tactful when asking about sensitive topics.
D) do all of the above.
Question
Sensitive survey topics include those that

A) people see as intruding on their privacy.
B) pose a threat to respondents if their answers become known to others.
C) address behaviors that social norms define as particularly good or particularly bad.
D) do any of the above.
Question
Dr. Patal plans to administer a survey about health-related behaviors that put people at risk for HIV infection. He is concerned that his respondents will be reluctant to answer truthfully. He can reduce this potential for biased responding by

A) implying the behavior is common, that "everybody does it."
B) using authority to justify the behavior, such as by starting out "Many doctors now think that …."
C) being casual, such as by using the phrase "Did you happen to …?"
D) doing any of the above.
Question
The term level of measurement refers to

A) rules for assigning numbers to observations.
B) the number of response options given for a survey question.
C) the level of aggregation (e.g., individual, group) at which data are collected.
D) the degree of specificity of the question asked in a survey item.
Question
A survey question that asks respondents whether they are male or female uses the ________ level of measurement.

A) nominal
B) ordinal
C) interval
D) ratio
Question
A survey question that asks respondents to rank a group of breakfast cereals from the one they like most to the one they like least uses the ________ level of measurement.

A) nominal
B) ordinal
C) interval
D) ratio
Question
A survey question that asks respondents to use a rating scale to note the extent to which they agree or disagree with an item uses the ________ level of measurement.

A) nominal
B) ordinal
C) interval
D) ratio
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Deck 15: Survey Research
1
Name the two purposes of surveys. Briefly describe a study that uses each of these purposes.
No Answer
2
Distinguish between sample surveys and convenience surveys.
No Answer
3
Distinguish between open-ended and closed-ended survey questions. Explain why a researcher would choose one type over the other when constructing a survey.
No Answer
4
Describe three factors a researcher should consider when wording survey questions.
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5
Describe one of the ways in which researchers can assess how well potential respondents understand survey questions.
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6
What are double-barreled questions? Give an example of one.
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7
What are leading questions and loaded questions? Give an example of each.
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8
Give an example of a survey question that makes an unfounded assumption.
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9
What is a sensitive question? Describe two factors that make survey questions sensitive.
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10
How might the sensitivity of a question affect people's responses to it? Describe two steps researchers can take to avoid these effects.
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11
What is meant by the term "level of measurement"? Name and define the levels of measurement from highest to lowest.
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12
What is the most important difference between interval and ratio levels of measurement?
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13
Explain how the difference between interval and ratio levels of measurement affects the interpretation of group differences based on those levels of measurement.
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14
Explain the relationship between level of measurement and the use of statistical tests.
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15
What is the robustness of a statistic?
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16
Explain how a measure's ecological validity is related to its level of measurement. Give an example.
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17
Describe the two methods of comparative scaling. What three conditions must be met to achieve reliable and valid results using this procedure?
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18
Describe the characteristics of an itemized rating scale.
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19
What are graphic rating scales and how are they scored?
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20
Describe the characteristics of an itemized rating scale.
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21
What factors should be considered in determining the number of scale points used for a numerical rating scale?
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22
Describe two advantages of using intermediate anchors for a numerical rating scale.
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23
Explain how preliminary research using open-ended questions can be used to improve the content validity of itemized rating scales.
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24
Describe two advantages of using multi-item scales.
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25
Describe the process of developing a Likert scale.
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26
Name three advantages of using a Likert scale compared to other types of scales.
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27
What is reverse scoring?
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28
Describe the process of developing a Thurstone scale. Give two reasons why a Thurstone rating scale is rarely used.
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29
What is a Guttman scale? Why are Guttman scales rarely used?
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30
What is a semantic differential scale and why is it widely used?
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31
What is response bias and how does it relate to measurement error?
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32
What is scale ambiguity and how does it produce response bias?
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33
What is category anchoring and how does it affect people's responses to scale items?
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34
What are estimation biases? Give an example.
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35
What are primacy and recency effects? When is each most likely to affect responses?
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36
Define social desirability response bias and name the two forms it can take.
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37
What is the acquiescence response bias and what steps can a researcher take to reduce the possibility that this bias is operating?
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38
What is the extremity response bias? Why is it difficult to control?
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39
What are cultural response sets? How might they affect interpretation of research results?
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40
What is the reference group effect?
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41
Explain the literal interpretation fallacy.
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42
Describe three characteristics that indicate good questionnaire design.
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43
Describe the factors that researchers should consider when sequencing the questions on a survey.
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44
How might question context affect responses to survey questions? What question characteristics are most likely to produce context effects?
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45
Describe four factors to consider when constructing the physical layout of a survey.
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46
Name and define the three categories of survey instructions.
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47
Describe two characteristics of high quality survey instructions.
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48
Give an example of instructions that might bias the survey results. Then explain how this bias could be removed from those instructions.
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49
Explain why using existing measures is preferable to developing a new measure. What considerations are important when combining existing measures in a questionnaire?
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50
Describe the advantages and limitations of group-administered surveys.
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51
Describe the advantages and limitations of using online surveys.
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52
Describe two methods of recruiting participants for online surveys.
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53
Describe two techniques that can be used to increase survey response rates.
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54
Describe the advantages and limitations of telephone interviews.
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55
Describe the advantages and limitations of conducting in-person interviews.
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56
Which method of data collection is most likely to induce a social desirability response bias? Which method is least likely? Explain your reasoning.
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57
Which of the following is a population parameter?

A) the proportion of U.S. residents age 65 and older
B) the mean age of a group of college student research participants
C) the correlation between age and attitudes toward nuclear power in a group of research participants recruited at a shopping mall
D) the standard deviation of the ages of a group of research participants recruited from church groups
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58
________ surveys are the best way of estimating population parameters.

A) Convenience
B) Internet
C) Sample
D) Quota
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59
________ surveys are based on a representative cross-section of the population of interest.

A) Internet
B) Quota
C) Convenience
D) Sample
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60
________ surveys are based on the group or groups of participants that are readily available to the researcher.

A) Internet
B) Quota
C) Convenience
D) Sample
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61
Which of the following statements about types of surveys is TRUE?

A) The data from sample surveys can be used to estimate population parameters but not to test hypotheses.
B) The data from convenience surveys can be used to test hypotheses but not to estimate population parameters.
C) There is essentially no difference between sample surveys and convenience surveys in the way in which participants are recruited.
D) Psychological researchers are more likely to use sample surveys than convenience surveys.
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62
Consider the following survey question: "Under what circumstances should the university raise tuition?" This question can be categorized as

A) open-ended
B) stem-based
C) closed-ended
D) acquiescent
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63
Consider the following survey item: "The university should not raise tuition under any circumstances" with these responses options: Strongly Agree, Agree, Disagree, or Strongly Disagree. This item can be categorized as

A) open-ended
B) stem-based
C) closed-ended
D) acquiescent
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64
Which of the following statements about open-ended versus closed-ended questions is FALSE?

A) The responses to open-ended questions are more easily quantified.
B) Open-ended questions are generally better to use when asking about the frequency of sensitive or socially disapproved behaviors.
C) Responses to open-ended questions can be used to design response options for closed-ended questions.
D) Open-ended questions are more useful when one is unsure of the appropriate response options to use with closed-ended questions.
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65
Consider the following survey item stem: "Polysyllabic and Latinate verbiage obfuscates signification." This stem violates the question-writing rule of

A) avoid unnecessary negatives.
B) use the language of research participants.
C) avoid double-barreled questions.
D) be specific.
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Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
Consider the following survey item stem: "People who do not speak English well should not be allow to teach in college." This stem violates the question-writing rule of

A) avoid unnecessary negatives.
B) use the language of research participants.
C) avoid double-barreled questions.
D) be specific.
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Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
To determine whether respondents are likely to misunderstand or misinterpret a survey question, researchers should

A) use their own judgment based on their knowledge of the intended participant population.
B) use only items that were used in previous surveys.
C) pretest the questions to determine how well potential respondents understand them.
D) use only open-ended questions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
A double-barreled question

A) includes two negatives.
B) implies that a certain response is desired.
C) uses emotional context to evoke a desired response.
D) asks for two or more pieces of information at the same time.
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69
A loaded question

A) includes two negatives.
B) includes high-level vocabulary words.
C) uses emotional context to evoke a desired response.
D) asks for two or more pieces of information at the same time.
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70
A leading question

A) includes two negatives.
B) implies that a certain response is desired.
C) uses emotional context to evoke a desired response.
D) asks for two or more pieces of information at the same time.
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71
Consider the following survey item stem: "My teacher speaks clearly and explains things well." This stem would be classified as being part of a(n) ________ question.

A) loaded
B) leading
C) double-barreled
D) insufficiently specific
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Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
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72
Consider the following survey item stem: "Do you agree that the state legislature should spend more money on education?" This stem would be classified as being part of a(n) ________ question.

A) loaded
B) leading
C) double-barreled
D) insufficiently specific
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73
Consider the following survey item stem: "Do you agree or disagree that labor unions should be prohibited from forcing their members to support undesirable political candidates?" This stem would be classified as a(n) ________ question.

A) loaded
B) leading
C) double-barreled
D) insufficiently specific
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Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
When writing questionnaire items, one should

A) ask questions that are as specific as possible.
B) avoid making assumptions about respondents' personal characteristics or beliefs.
C) be tactful when asking about sensitive topics.
D) do all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
Sensitive survey topics include those that

A) people see as intruding on their privacy.
B) pose a threat to respondents if their answers become known to others.
C) address behaviors that social norms define as particularly good or particularly bad.
D) do any of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Dr. Patal plans to administer a survey about health-related behaviors that put people at risk for HIV infection. He is concerned that his respondents will be reluctant to answer truthfully. He can reduce this potential for biased responding by

A) implying the behavior is common, that "everybody does it."
B) using authority to justify the behavior, such as by starting out "Many doctors now think that …."
C) being casual, such as by using the phrase "Did you happen to …?"
D) doing any of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
The term level of measurement refers to

A) rules for assigning numbers to observations.
B) the number of response options given for a survey question.
C) the level of aggregation (e.g., individual, group) at which data are collected.
D) the degree of specificity of the question asked in a survey item.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
A survey question that asks respondents whether they are male or female uses the ________ level of measurement.

A) nominal
B) ordinal
C) interval
D) ratio
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k this deck
79
A survey question that asks respondents to rank a group of breakfast cereals from the one they like most to the one they like least uses the ________ level of measurement.

A) nominal
B) ordinal
C) interval
D) ratio
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Unlock for access to all 134 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
A survey question that asks respondents to use a rating scale to note the extent to which they agree or disagree with an item uses the ________ level of measurement.

A) nominal
B) ordinal
C) interval
D) ratio
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