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The Effect of Probing “Don’t Know” Responses on Measurement Quality and Nonresponse in Surveys

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Version 2 2018-05-16, 20:53
Version 1 2017-06-26, 15:40
journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-16, 20:53 authored by Jouni Kuha, Sarah Butt, Myrsini Katsikatsou, Chris J. Skinner

In survey interviews, “Don’t know” (DK) responses are commonly treated as missing data. One way to reduce the rate of such responses is to probe initial DK answers with a follow-up question designed to encourage respondents to give substantive, non-DK responses. However, such probing can also reduce data quality by introducing additional or differential measurement error. We propose a latent variable model for analyzing the effects of probing on responses to survey questions. The model makes it possible to separate measurement effects of probing from true differences between respondents who do and do not require probing. We analyze new data from an experiment, which compared responses to two multi-item batteries of questions with and without probing. In this study, probing reduced the rate of DK responses by around a half. However, it also had substantial measurement effects, in that probed answers were often weaker measures of constructs of interest than were unprobed answers. These effects were larger for questions on attitudes than for pseudo-knowledge questions on perceptions of external facts. The results provide evidence against the use of probing of “Don’t know” responses, at least for the kinds of items and respondents considered in this study. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

Funding

This work was supported by a grant from the UK National Centre for Research Methods under its program of Methodological Innovation Projects. Fieldwork was conducted using the ESS Innovation Sample administered by Ipsos MORI as part of The European Social Survey: Data in a Changing Europe project (ESS DACE) supported by the European Union under Framework Programme 7 (Research Infrastructures), GA number 262208.

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