J 2025

Video-administered questionnaire: Psychometric properties and comparison with a text-based format

STROJIL, Adam and Hynek CÍGLER

Basic information

Original name

Video-administered questionnaire: Psychometric properties and comparison with a text-based format

Name (in English)

Video-administered questionnaire: Psychometric properties and comparison with a text-based format

Authors

STROJIL, Adam and Hynek CÍGLER

Edition

Computers in Human Behavior Reports, 2025, 2451-9588

Other information

Language

Czech

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Organization

Fakulta sociálních studií – Repository – Repository

Keywords in English

Interviewer effect; Online questionnaire;Video-administered questionnaire;Method effects;Mode of administration

Links

GA23-06924S, research and development project.
Changed: 12/6/2025 00:50, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

V originále

Short videos have become popular online content. This study experimentally examined the feasibility of presenting items of an online psychological questionnaire as short videos (VQ) and compared this method to a traditional text-based administration (TQ) using a convenient online sample of N = 321. VQ was administered either by a male (VQM) or a female (VQF) interviewer. Strict measurement invariance was established across both methods for both inventories used. No significant differences emerged in the methods' break-off rate, reliability, or criterion validity. Respondents' self-reported ability to focus did not differ between VQ and TQ. Similarly, no differences between the methods were found in an attempt to measure respondent's focus objectively. It seems that neither the social desirability nor the interviewer effect had any notable negative influence on VQ. The completion time was faster in VQM but not VQF compared to TQ, suggesting that video administration is not necessarily slower. Respondents rated VQ as the more enjoyable method. There was also a visible improvement in model fit indices in the VQ over TQ for both employed inventories. The results of this exploratory study imply that videos could be an advantageous form of psychological questionnaire administration, although replication is necessary.

In English

Short videos have become popular online content. This study experimentally examined the feasibility of presenting items of an online psychological questionnaire as short videos (VQ) and compared this method to a traditional text-based administration (TQ) using a convenient online sample of N = 321. VQ was administered either by a male (VQM) or a female (VQF) interviewer. Strict measurement invariance was established across both methods for both inventories used. No significant differences emerged in the methods' break-off rate, reliability, or criterion validity. Respondents' self-reported ability to focus did not differ between VQ and TQ. Similarly, no differences between the methods were found in an attempt to measure respondent's focus objectively. It seems that neither the social desirability nor the interviewer effect had any notable negative influence on VQ. The completion time was faster in VQM but not VQF compared to TQ, suggesting that video administration is not necessarily slower. Respondents rated VQ as the more enjoyable method. There was also a visible improvement in model fit indices in the VQ over TQ for both employed inventories. The results of this exploratory study imply that videos could be an advantageous form of psychological questionnaire administration, although replication is necessary.

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