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Weigold, Arne; Weigold, Ingrid K.; Russell, Elizabeth J. – Psychological Methods, 2013
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…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Data Collection, Surveys, Online Surveys
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Meade, Adam W.; Craig, S. Bartholomew – Psychological Methods, 2012
When data are collected via anonymous Internet surveys, particularly under conditions of obligatory participation (such as with student samples), data quality can be a concern. However, little guidance exists in the published literature regarding techniques for detecting careless responses. Previously several potential approaches have been…
Descriptors: Online Surveys, Data Collection, Research Problems, Identification
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Madill, Anna; Gough, Brendan – Psychological Methods, 2008
In discussing the place of diverse qualitative research within psychological science, the authors highlight the potential permeability of the quantitative-qualitative boundary and identify different ways of increasing communication between researchers specializing in different methods. Explicating diversity within qualitative research is…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Models, Psychology, Research Methodology
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Dagne, Getachew A.; Brown, C. Hendricks; Howe, George W. – Psychological Methods, 2007
This article presents new methods for modeling the strength of association between multiple behaviors in a behavioral sequence, particularly those involving substantively important interaction patterns. Modeling and identifying such interaction patterns becomes more complex when behaviors are assigned to more than two categories, as is the case…
Descriptors: Interaction, Bayesian Statistics, Models, Behavior Patterns
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Ozechowski, Timothy J.; Turner, Charles W.; Hops, Hyman – Psychological Methods, 2007
This article demonstrates the use of mixed-effects logistic regression (MLR) for conducting sequential analyses of binary observational data. MLR is a special case of the mixed-effects logit modeling framework, which may be applied to multicategorical observational data. The MLR approach is motivated in part by G. A. Dagne, G. W. Howe, C. H.…
Descriptors: Probability, Young Adults, Sampling, Observation
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Graham, John W.; Taylor, Bonnie J.; Olchowski, Allison E.; Cumsille, Patricio E. – Psychological Methods, 2006
The authors describe 2 efficiency (planned missing data) designs for measurement: the 3-form design and the 2-method measurement design. The 3-form design, a kind of matrix sampling, allows researchers to leverage limited resources to collect data for 33% more survey questions than can be answered by any 1 respondent. Power tables for estimating…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Structural Equation Models, Psychological Studies, Data Collection