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Article

Are Fast Responses More Random? Testing the Effect of Response Time on Scale in an Online Choice Experiment

Details

Citation

B?rger T (2016) Are Fast Responses More Random? Testing the Effect of Response Time on Scale in an Online Choice Experiment. Environmental and Resource Economics, 65 (2), pp. 389-413. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10640-015-9905-1

Abstract
Scepticism over stated preference surveys conducted online revolves around the concerns over “professional respondents” who might rush through the questionnaire without sufficiently considering the information provided. To gain insight on the validity of this phenomenon and test the effect of response time on choice randomness, this study makes use of a recently conducted choice experiment survey on ecological and amenity effects of an offshore windfarm in the UK. The positive relationship between self-rated and inferred attribute attendance and response time is taken as evidence for a link between response time and cognitive effort. Subsequently, the generalised multinomial logit model is employed to test the effect of response time on scale, which indicates the weight of the deterministic relative to the error component in the random utility model. Results show that longer response time increases scale, i.e. decreases choice randomness. This positive scale effect of response time is further found to be non-linear and wear off at some point beyond which extreme response time decreases scale. While response time does not systematically affect welfare estimates, higher response time increases the precision of such estimates. These effects persist when self-reported choice certainty is controlled for. Implications of the results for online stated preference surveys and further research are discussed.

Keywords
Attribute non-attendance; Choice experiment; Generalised multinomial logit; Offshore windfarm; Online survey; Response time; Scale heterogeneity

Journal
Environmental and Resource Economics: Volume 65, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/10/2016
Publication date online18/03/2015
Date accepted by journal08/03/2015
URL
ISSN0924-6460
eISSN1573-1502