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Original Articles

Does gender-specific starting point bias in choice experiments prevail among well-informed respondents: evidence from an empirical study

Pages 1527-1530 | Published online: 28 Aug 2013

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Jacob Ladenburg, Ole Bonnichsen & Jürgen Meyerhoff. (2020) Trading off positive and negative service changes in childcare: a choice experiment using a latent class modelling approach. Applied Economics 52:13, pages 1427-1445.
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Jacob Ladenburg, Kirsten Lund Jensen & Christa Lassen. (2014) Does it matter why power outages occur? An example of information-induced gender-heterogeneous preference on the intensive and extensive margins of choice. Applied Economics Letters 21:10, pages 657-664.
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Articles from other publishers (5)

Milad Haghani, Michiel C.J. Bliemer, John M. Rose, Harmen Oppewal & Emily Lancsar. (2021) Hypothetical bias in stated choice experiments: Part II. Conceptualisation of external validity, sources and explanations of bias and effectiveness of mitigation methods. Journal of Choice Modelling 41, pages 100322.
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Tenaw G. Abate, Morten R. Mørkbak & Søren B. Olsen. (2018) Inducing value and institutional learning effects in stated choice experiments using advanced disclosure and instructional choice set treatments. Agricultural Economics 49:3, pages 339-351.
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Leon A.G. Oerlemans, Kai-Ying Chan & Jako Volschenk. (2016) Willingness to pay for green electricity: A review of the contingent valuation literature and its sources of error. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 66, pages 875-885.
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Frédéric Salladarré, Dorothée Brécard, Sterenn Lucas & Pierrick Ollivier. (2016) Are French consumers ready to pay a premium for eco-labeled seafood products? A contingent valuation estimation with heterogeneous anchoring. Agricultural Economics 47:2, pages 247-258.
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Jacob Ladenburg & Søren Bøye Olsen. (2014) Augmenting short Cheap Talk scripts with a repeated Opt-Out Reminder in Choice Experiment surveys. Resource and Energy Economics 37, pages 39-63.
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