Přehled o publikaci
2024
The discrepancy between manifest response on a Likerttype scale and the most fixated response option as an indicator of social-desirable responding
BURGET, Martin; Stanislav JEŽEK; Martin JAKUBEK a Monika KRAFČÍKOVÁZákladní údaje
Originální název
The discrepancy between manifest response on a Likerttype scale and the most fixated response option as an indicator of social-desirable responding
Autoři
BURGET, Martin; Stanislav JEŽEK; Martin JAKUBEK a Monika KRAFČÍKOVÁ
Vydání
ITC Conference 2024, 2024
Další údaje
Jazyk
angličtina
Typ výsledku
Prezentace na konferencích
Stát vydavatele
Španělsko
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Odkazy
Organizace
Fakulta sociálních studií – Masarykova univerzita – Repozitář
Klíčová slova anglicky
response style; cognitive aspects of survey methodology; eye-tracking
Návaznosti
GA23-06924S, projekt VaV.
Změněno: 28. 3. 2025 00:51, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík
Anotace
V originále
amp; Krafčíková, 2016) comparing observed responses with responses derived from eye-tracking (ET) data. We derived 2 ET responses: the most fixated option (ET response) and a weighted mean of fixated options (weighted ET response). The dataset comprised responses to Slovak version of NEO-FFI with 5-point Likert-type response scales administered to 50 university students. The inventory was administered twice in random order; in one condition the participants were instructed to respond honestly and in the other fake good. In planned analyses of the honest-condition responses we found a high level of agreement between the observed responses and the ET responses; the overall agreement was 86%. The observed scale scores correlated with the scores based on weighted ET responses from .92 to .97. The weighted ET scores have slightly smaller variances than manifest scores and their popularities are slightly and systematically different. The fit and parameters of unidimensional CFA models did not systematically differ between observed and weighted ET responses. Additionally, post-hoc analyses suggested that the discrepancies between observed and weighted ET responses were in the direction of social desirability and that the discrepancies correlate highly with the popularity of items in the fake-good condition. We discuss whether the discrepancies represent social-desirable editing during the response phase of responding as conceptualized by Tourangeau et al. (2000) or are an artefact of boundedness of the response scale. These findings are based on a limited sample not allowing us to fit multidimensional models. Data were originally collected for other purposes and contain limited ET information. The agreement of observed and ET responses is somewhat inflated by the use of mouse for responding.