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List Experiment×Conjoint Survey Experiment×
Lĩnh vựcPolitical SciencePolitical Science
HọProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Năm ra đời20112014
Người khởi xướngSurvey methodology; modern estimators by Kosuke Imai, Graeme Blair, Adam GlynnJens Hainmueller, Daniel Hopkins, Teppei Yamamoto
LoạiSensitive-question survey experimentMulti-attribute forced-choice survey experiment with design-based causal estimands
Công trình gốcImai, K. (2011). Multivariate Regression Analysis for the Item Count Technique. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 106(494), 407–416. DOI ↗Hainmueller, J., Hopkins, D. J., & Yamamoto, T. (2014). Causal Inference in Conjoint Analysis: Understanding Multidimensional Choices via Stated Preference Experiments. Political Analysis, 22(1), 1–30. DOI ↗
Tên gọi khácItem count technique, Unmatched count technique, Item count method, List randomizationCausal conjoint, Forced-choice conjoint experiment, AMCE conjoint, Conjoint experiment
Liên quan34
Tóm tắtThe list experiment, also called the item count technique, is a survey design that measures the prevalence of a sensitive attitude or behavior without ever requiring any respondent to directly disclose it. Respondents are randomly split into two groups: a control group sees a list of innocuous items and reports only how many apply to them, while a treatment group sees the same list plus one sensitive item. Because respondents report only a count, no individual answer reveals their stance on the sensitive item, and the difference in average counts between the groups estimates the proportion holding the sensitive trait.A conjoint survey experiment presents respondents with profiles — of candidates, immigrants, policies, or products — described by several attributes whose levels are independently randomized, and asks respondents to choose between or rate the profiles. Hainmueller, Hopkins, and Yamamoto's 2014 framework places this design on a rigorous causal footing, defining the average marginal component effect (AMCE) as the design-based causal effect of an attribute level, averaged over the randomization distribution of all other attributes. It lets political scientists estimate the relative causal weight of many decision factors simultaneously from realistic, multidimensional choices.
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