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Original Articles

The role of respondents’ comfort for variance in stated choice surveys: evidence from a SCUBA diving case

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon &
Pages 1993-2012 | Received 07 Apr 2016, Accepted 29 Nov 2016, Published online: 25 Jan 2017
 

Abstract

Preference elicitation among outdoor recreational users is subject to measurement errors that depend, in part, on survey planning. This study uses data from a choice experiment survey on recreational SCUBA diving to investigate whether self-reported information on respondents’ comfort when they complete surveys correlates with the error variance in stated choice models of their responses. Comfort-related variables are included in the scale functions of the scaled multinomial logit models. The hypothesis was that higher comfort reduces error variance in answers, as revealed by a higher scale parameter and vice versa. Information on, e.g., sleep and time since eating (higher comfort) correlated with scale heterogeneity, and produced lower error variance when controlled for in the model. That respondents’ comfort may influence choice behavior suggests that knowledge of the respondents’ activity patterns could be used to plan the timing of interviews to decrease error variance in choices and, hence, generate better information.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Ministry of Education of Malaysia and Universiti Putra Malaysia under Skim Latihan Akademik IPTA (SLAI), the Responsible Rural Tourism Network and Ministry of Higher Education's (Malaysia) Long Term Research Grant Scheme (LRGS) Programme [Reference No.: JPT.S (BPKI) 2000/09/01/015Jld.4 (67)], and the Danish National Research Foundation for the Center for Macroecology, Climate and Evolution [CMEC Grant number DNRF96]. We are grateful to Dr. Syamsul HM Afandi for external supervision and Suziana Hassan for helping with data management. Thank you to the SCUBA divers who participated in the survey interview.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

Ministry of Education of Malaysia and Universiti Putra Malaysia under Skim Latihan Akademik IPTA (SLAI); the Responsible Rural Tourism Network and Ministry of Higher Education's (Malaysia) Long Term Research Grant Scheme (LRGS) Programme [Reference Number JPT.S (BPKI) 2000/09/01/015Jld.4 (67)]; the Danish National Research Foundation for the Center for Macroecology, Climate and Evolution [CMEC Grant Number DNRF96].

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