Interviewer Effects in Live Video and Prerecorded Video Interviewing

Author:

West Brady T1,Ong Ai Rene1,Conrad Frederick G1,Schober Michael F1,Larsen Kallan M1,Hupp Andrew L1

Affiliation:

1. Brady T. West is a Research Associate Professor with the Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 426 Thompson Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248, USA. Ai Rene Ong is a PhD Candidate with the Michigan Program in Survey and Data Science, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, 426 Thompson Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248, USA. Frederick G. Conrad is a Resea

Abstract

Abstract Live video (LV) communication tools (e.g., Zoom) have the potential to provide survey researchers with many of the benefits of in-person interviewing, while also greatly reducing data collection costs, given that interviewers do not need to travel and make in-person visits to sampled households. The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the vulnerability of in-person data collection to public health crises, forcing survey researchers to explore remote data collection modes—such as LV interviewing—that seem likely to yield high-quality data without in-person interaction. Given the potential benefits of these technologies, the operational and methodological aspects of video interviewing have started to receive research attention from survey methodologists. Although it is remote, video interviewing still involves respondent–interviewer interaction that introduces the possibility of interviewer effects. No research to date has evaluated this potential threat to the quality of the data collected in video interviews. This research note presents an evaluation of interviewer effects in a recent experimental study of alternative approaches to video interviewing including both LV interviewing and the use of prerecorded videos of the same interviewers asking questions embedded in a web survey (“prerecorded video” interviewing). We find little evidence of significant interviewer effects when using these two approaches, which is a promising result. We also find that when interviewer effects were present, they tended to be slightly larger in the LV approach as would be expected in light of its being an interactive approach. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of these findings for future research using video interviewing.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Statistics and Probability

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