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- Title
The More You Ask, the Less You Get: When Additional Questions Hurt External Validity.
- Authors
Li, Ye; Krefeld-Schwalb, Antonia; Wall, Daniel G.; Johnson, Eric J.; Toubia, Olivier; Bartels, Daniel M.
- Abstract
Researchers and practitioners in marketing, economics, and public policy often use preference elicitation tasks to forecast real-world behaviors. These tasks typically ask a series of similarly structured questions. The authors posit that every time a respondent answers an additional elicitation question, two things happen: (1) they provide information about some parameter(s) of interest, such as their time preference or the partworth for a product attribute, and (2) the respondent increasingly "adapts" to the task—that is, using task-specific decision processes specialized for this task that may or may not apply to other tasks. Importantly, adaptation comes at the cost of potential mismatch between the task-specific decision process and real-world processes that generate the target behaviors, such that asking more questions can reduce external validity. The authors used mouse and eye tracking to trace decision processes in time preference measurement and conjoint choice tasks. Respondents increasingly relied on task-specific decision processes as more questions were asked, leading to reduced external validity for both related tasks and real-world behaviors. Importantly, the external validity of measured preferences peaked after as few as seven questions in both types of tasks. When measuring preferences, less can be more.
- Subjects
QUESTIONING; VALIDITY of statistics; INDIVIDUALS' preferences; CONJOINT analysis; MARKETING; TASKS; TIME; PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation; EYE tracking
- Publication
Journal of Marketing Research (JMR), 2022, Vol 59, Issue 5, p963
- ISSN
0022-2437
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/00222437211073581