Adaptive Conjoint Analysis
Adaptive Conjoint Analysis (ACA) is a hybrid, computer-administered conjoint method that builds each respondent's part-worth utilities by combining a self-explicated priors stage with a sequence of adaptively chosen paired-comparison trade-offs. Developed by Richard Johnson at Sawtooth Software in the mid-1980s, ACA was designed to handle many more attributes than a respondent could realistically evaluate in full-profile or choice tasks. The interview first asks people to rate the desirability of attribute levels and the importance of attributes, then uses those answers to generate paired product comparisons that are roughly balanced in utility, which are the most informative trade-offs. Respondents indicate graded preference between each pair, and the program updates the utilities in real time, focusing later questions where uncertainty is greatest. Green, Krieger, and Agarwal's 1991 evaluation in the Journal of Marketing Research documented both ACA's strengths and important caveats about its self-explicated component and attribute-importance estimates. ACA produces individual-level utilities that can drive purchase-likelihood calibration and market simulation.
Die vollständige Methode lesen
Melden Sie sich mit einem kostenlosen Konto an, um diesen Abschnitt zu lesen.
Methodenkarte
Die Nachbarschaft verwandter Methoden — wählen Sie einen Knoten, um sie zu erkunden.
Quellen
- Green, P. E., Krieger, A. M., & Agarwal, M. K. (1991). Adaptive Conjoint Analysis: Some Caveats and Suggestions. Journal of Marketing Research, 28(2), 215-222. DOI: 10.1177/002224379102800208 ↗
- Orme, B. K. (2020). Getting Started with Conjoint Analysis: Strategies for Product Design and Pricing Research (4th ed.). Madison, WI: Research Publishers LLC. ISBN: 9780972729772
So zitieren Sie diese Seite
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Adaptive Conjoint Analysis (ACA). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/de/marketing-research/adaptive-conjoint
Welche Methode?
Stellen Sie diese Methode neben ihre nächsten Verwandten und lesen Sie sie nebeneinander — die Bibliothek legt die Bücher auf den Tisch; die Wahl liegt bei Ihnen.
- Choice-Based ConjointMarketing Research↔ vergleichen
- Conjoint Market SimulatorMarketing Research↔ vergleichen
- Discrete Choice ExperimentMarketing Research↔ vergleichen
- MaxDiff / Best-Worst ScalingMarketing Research↔ vergleichen
Referenziert von
Ähnliche Methoden
Einen Fehler auf dieser Seite entdeckt? Melden oder Korrektur vorschlagen →