Handling Do-Not-Know Answers: Exploring New Approaches in Online and Mixed-Mode Surveys
Publication date
2016-02-01
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Article
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taverne
Abstract
An important decision in online and mixed-mode questionnaire design is if and how to include a “do-not-know” (DK) option. Mandatory response is often a default option, but methodologists have advised against this. Several solutions for the DK category are suggested. These include (1) not explicitly offering a DK, but skipping questions is allowed, (2) explicitly offering a DK option with visual separation from the substantive responses, and (3) using the interactivity of the web to emulate interviewer probing after a DK answer. To test these solutions, experimental data were collected in a probability based online panel. Not offering DK, but allowing respondents to skip questions, followed by a polite probe when skips occurred, resulted in the lowest amount of missing information. To assess the effect of probing across different modes, a second experiment was carried out that compared explicitly and implicitly offering the DK option for web and telephone surveys.
Keywords
data quality, emulating interviewers, item nonresponse, probing, visual design, web survey, Taverne, Computer Science Applications, General Social Sciences, Library and Information Sciences, Law
Citation
de Leeuw, E D, Hox, J J & Boevé, A 2016, 'Handling Do-Not-Know Answers : Exploring New Approaches in Online and Mixed-Mode Surveys', Social Science Computer Review, vol. 34, no. 1, pp. 116-132. https://doi.org/10.1177/0894439315573744