Internet versus mail: are stated preferences affected by the mode of sampling in a choice experiment?

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearch

In a choice experiment setup, this paper suggests that internet surveys can be a viable alternative to traditional mail surveys when gathering feedback from a sample of respondents. In a study concerning preferences for avoiding encroachment of nature areas in future motorway planning in Denmark, two samples of respondents are surveyed – one by internet and one by mail. Results suggest that additional self-selection mechanisms in the internet survey mode lead to the internet sample being less representative of the survey population than is the case for the mail sample. Similar response rates are obtained in the two samples, but the internet sample is apparently less prone to protest bidding. A thorough parametric analysis cannot reject that stated preferences elicited by use of the two different modes of sampling are identical. This suggests that the fear of a potential survey mode effect is unfounded, and using the internet for stated preference surveys does not introduce any additional major biases that are not already present in the traditional paper-and-pencil surveys.
Original languageEnglish
Publication date2007
Number of pages29
Publication statusPublished - 2007
EventEAERE 2007 Annual Conference - Thessaloniki, Greece
Duration: 27 Jun 200730 Jun 2007
Conference number: 15

Conference

ConferenceEAERE 2007 Annual Conference
Number15
CountryGreece
CityThessaloniki
Period27/06/200730/06/2007

    Research areas

  • Former LIFE faculty - survey mode effect, representativity, choice experiment, willingness-to-pay, random parameters, mixed logit

ID: 8072244