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Volume 6 Issue 1
Individualised Rating-Scale Procedure: A Means of Reducing Response Style Contamination in Survey Data?
Elisa Chami-Castaldi, Nina Reynolds and James Wallace
School of Management, University of Bradford, UK
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Response style bias has been shown to seriously contaminate the substantive results drawn from
survey data; particularly those conducted using cross-cultural samples. As a consequence, identification
of response formats that suffer least from response style bias has been called for. Previous studies show
respondents’ personal characteristics such as age, education level and culture, are connected with response
style manifestation.
Differences in the way respondents interpret and utilise researcher-defined fixed rating-scales (e.g. Likert formats),
poses a problem for survey researchers. Techniques that are currently used to remove response bias from survey
data are inadequate as they cannot accurately determine the level of contamination present and frequently blur
true score variance. Inappropriate rating-scales can impact on the level of response style bias manifested, insofar
as they may not represent respondents’ cognitions. Rating-scale lengths that are too long present respondents with
some response categories that are not ‘meaningful’, whereas rating-scales that are too short force respondents into
compressing their cognitive rating-scales into the number of response categories provided (this can cause ERS contamination –
extreme responding). We are therefore not able to guard against two respondents, who share the same cognitive position on a
continuum, reporting their stance using different numbers on the rating-scale provided. This is especially problematic
where a standard fixed rating-scale is used in cross-cultural surveys.
This paper details the development of the Individualised Rating-Scale Procedure (IRSP), a means of extracting
a respondent’s ‘ideal’ rating-scale length, and as such ‘designing out’ response bias, for use as the
measurement instrument in a survey. Whilst the fundamental ideas for self-anchoring rating-scales have
been posited in the literature, the IRSP was developed using a series of qualitative interviews with
participants. Finally, we discuss how the IRSP’s reliability and validity can be quantitatively assessed
and compared to typical fixed researcher-defined rating-scales, such as the Likert format.
Keywords:
scale length, response styles, response bias, survey research, cross-cultural surveys, individualised rating-scale procedure
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