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Administrivia . No Confliction Between IEOR 170 and IEOR 171There is no planned final exam for IEOR 171 up till now.Please contact Dina Michail dina@ieor if you can not enroll these two classes at the same timeMore than three students are still on the waiting list. Get yourself enrolled if you h
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1. IEOR 170: Questionnaire Design and Paper Prototyping Jingtao Wang
2/21/2007
2. Administrivia No Confliction Between IEOR 170 and IEOR 171
There is no planned final exam for IEOR 171 up till now.
Please contact Dina Michail dina@ieor if you can not enroll these two classes at the same time
More than three students are still on the waiting list.
Get yourself enrolled if you have completed all the assignments up till now.
3. Administrivia Group assignment can not be delayed.
Every member will receive a zero if not submitted in time
Two peer-reviews about your team members for this semester
The Contextual Inquiry Assignment is out today.
Due in two weeks
Get an early start!
4. Previously on IEOR 170 Task Analysis
Eleven Task Analysis Questions
Contextual Inquiry
Why Context Inquiry?
Major Principles
What is Persona?
5. Previously on IEOR 170 The Needfinding process
Takeout box design practicing
6. Topics Questionnaire Design
Paper Prototypes
7. What is a Questionnaire? An instrument (form) to
Collect answers to questions
Collect factual data – gathers information or measures
A series of written questions / items in a fixed, rational order
8. Why Using a Questionnaire? A well designed questionnaire can
Give appropriate data which answers your research question
Minimize potential sources of bias
Will more likely be completed
9. Advantages of Questionnaires Can reach a large number of people relatively easily and economically (especially postal/E-mail questionnaires)
Provide quantifiable answers
Quick and easy to conduct
Relatively easy to analyze
Get quick feedback on a range of ideas
Can get person’s initial reaction to an idea
Can get detailed information from a person
10. Disadvantages of Questionnaires Provides only limited insight into problem
Limited response allowed by questions
Maybe not the right questions are asked
Varying response
Misunderstanding/misinterpretation
Need to get it right first time
Hard to chase after missing data
Often takes place away from natural setting
Recall problems
High probability of
False positives: user thought something would be an issue but it wasn’t
Missed problems: user didn’t catch an issue
11. Common Pitfalls In Questionnaire Design Basic tenet: Ask a question, and you’ll get a response!
Translation: Garbage in, garbage out!
12. Lessons of Consumer Survey When Levi Strauss & Co. asked students which clothes would be most popular this year, 90% said Levi’s 501 jeans. (They were the only jeans on the list.)
13. Why Xbox was Not Successful in Japan ? Only around half million units were sold in Japan in four years
Survey Results from Japan
Too Big (rooms in Japan are small)
Too Heavy
Not Stylish
Few RPG games
14. Why Xbox 360 Again Couldn’t Change the Game in Japan ? Smaller than PS3
Less Heavy than PS3
As “Stylish” as PS3
More RPG games than PS3 in Japan at this time
15. Types of Questionnaire Self-administrated
By post
E-mail/Internet
Interviewer-administrated
Face to face
Telephone
16. Self-administered Questionnaire Advantages
Cheap and easy to administer
Preserves confidentiality
Completed at respondent's convenience
Administered in a standard manner
No influence by interviewer
17. Self-administered Questionnaire Disadvantages
Low response rate
Questions can be misunderstood
No control by interviewer
Time loss
18. Interview-administered Questionnaire Advantages
Participation by illiterate people
Clarification of ambiguity
Quick answers
19. Interview-administered Questionnaire Disadvantages
Interviewer bias
Needs more resources
Only short questionnaires possible
Difficult for sensible issues
20. Objectives of a Questionnaire To ensure that obtained information is relevant, accurate and generalizable to the study
i.e. Validity, Reliability and Representiveness
21. Format of Questions Two main question formats
Closed format ? give a ‘fixed’ response
Yes, No, Don’t know
Always, sometimes, never
Open format ? allow people to express their views in their own words:
What is your most distressing symptom? Please describe: ____________________________________________________________________________________
22. Open or Closed? Closed – forced choice
Advantages
Simple and quick
Reduces discrimination against less literate
Easy to code, record, analyse
Easy to compare
Easy to report results
Disadvantages
Restricted number of possible answers
Loss of information
Possible compromise
Insert field „others“
23. Open or Closed? Open format – free text
Advantages
Not directive
Allows exploration of issues - generate hypothesis
Used even if no comprehensive range of alternative choices
Good for asking about knowledge and attitudes
Detailed and unexpected answers possible
Disadvantages
Answer depends on interviewer
Time-consuming
Coding problems
Difficult to analyse!
Difficult to compare groups
24. Closed Questions Straightforward response
What is your age in years? ___ years
How long have you stayed in Hotel X? ___ days
What is your sex (gender)?
Male ? Female ?
Did you stay in Hotel X on 23/7/04?
Yes ? No ? Don’t know ?
Did you eat dinner in restaurant x on 23/7/04?
Yes ? No ? Don’t know ?
25. 2. Checklist
Which of the following did you eat for dinner on 23/7/04?
Chicken ?
Beef ?
Ham ?
Salad ?
Egg mayonnaise ?
Closed Questions
26. Closed Questions 3. Rating scale
Did you use condoms during the past six months?
With… Always Sometimes Seldomly Never
Steady partner ? ? ? ?
Casual partners ? ? ? ?
Sex workers ? ? ? ?
27. Closed Questions 4. Numerical rating scale
How useful would you think that information on hepatitis A from the travel agency would be? (please circle)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Not at all useful Very useful
28. Closed Questions 5. Scales for measuring attitude (Lickert)
Travel companies should not offer anymore hotels linked to hepatitis A
No, I strongly disagree ?
No, I disagree quite a lot ?
No, I disagree just a little ?
I’m not sure about this ?
Yes, I agree just a little ?
Yes, I agree quite a lot ?
Yes, I strongly agree ?
29. Open Questions Often used in qualitative research, focus groups, in trawling questionnaires
What do you think is the reason you became ill? ____________________________________
Do you think service X would make your life easier? If so, in what way? If not, why not? ________________________________________________________________________________________________
30. Basic Principles - Question Order Easy ? difficult
General ? particular
Factual ? abstract
Starting questions
Simple
With closed format
Relevant to main subject
Non-threatening
Neither demographic nor personal questions
Be aware of ordering effects!
31. Basic Principles - Question Order 2 Group questions by
Topic/ response options
Don’t put most important item last
Questionnaire likely to be completed if
Relevant
Logical
32. Basic Principles – Question Format Ask for one information at a time:
Did you go swimming in the pool and have cocktails at the bar during night or day?
Yes
No
Remember option “don’t know”
Mutually exclusive and exhaustive answer options
Vertical order of answer options
33. Basic Principles – Be Precise Did you swim often in the pool?
Yes
No
vs.
How often did you swim in the pool?
Once
Twice
Three times or more
Not at all
Don´t know
35. Basic Principles – Be Appropriate
Are you a drunk?
Yes
No
vs.
How often did you consume alcoholic beverages during your holiday?
Daily
2-6 times/week
Once a week
Less than once a week
Don´t know
36. How to ask a sensitive question(Barton, POQ 1958) The casual approach:
"Do you happen to have killed your partner?”
The numbered card approach:
"Would you please read off the number on this card which corresponds to what became of your partner?
1 Natural death
2 I killed her/ him
3 Other"
37. The everybody approach:
(also called counterbiasing method)
"As you know, many people have been killing their partners these days. Do you happen to have killed yours?"
The other people approach:
"Do you know any people who have murdered their partners? How about yourself?"
38. Personal Information - Build rapport, legitimize
Embarrassing Information (downward bias)
counterbiasing statement: “Recent studies indicate that a man often uses his wife’s hair spray. Do you use your wife’s hair spray?”
projective techniques
randomized response techniques
Prestige, Normative Information (upward bias) Sensitive Questions(continued)
39. Asking Sensitive Questions: Rules of Thumb Hide in a group of more innocuous questions
State that the behavior or attitude is not unusual
Phrase in terms of others and how they might feel or react
Use multiple-choice response categories
Randomized response
40. Basic Principles - Be Objective
Did you drink the strange pink drink?
Yes
No
vs.
Which beverage did you consume?
Water
Beer
Wine
Karkadé
None of them
Don´t know
41. Basic Principles – Be Simple & Clear Did you smoke not less than a mean amount of 7 cigarettes/2 days from 1999 onwards?
Yes
No
vs.
Did you smoke a mean amount of 2 pack of cigarettes/week for the last 5 years?
Yes
No
Don´t know
42. Be Simple & Clear – Common Pitfalls Avoid jargon/abbreviations/slang
How often do you get up at night to PU? (pass urine)
Should IVDUs be treated in the community?
Avoid not mutually exclusive options
What age are you?
16-20 ? ?
20-25 ? ?
25-30 ? ?
35-40 ? ?
43. Be Simple & Clear – Common Pitfalls Avoid leading questions
Do you think that the food in the hotel made you sick?
Did the hotel staff seem unhygenic to you?
Do you agree that the hospital staff were close to exhaustion?
Avoid making questionnaire too long
Typographical / spelling errors
44. Examples A Gallup poll sponsored by the disposable-diaper industry asked:
“It is estimated that disposable diapers account for less than 2% of the trash in today’s landfills. In contrast, beverage containers, third-class mail and yard waste to account for about 21% of the trash in landfills. Given this, in your opinion, would it be fair to ban disposable diapers?”
(84% said no.)
45. Minimize Dichotomous Questions Dichotomous: a grammatical structure that suggests a yes or no answer
Bad = “Are you satisfied with writing letters?”
Good = “How do you feel about writing letters?”
46. “Why” Questions – Take Care “Why” questions are problematic because they…
Presuppose things happen for a reason & the respondent knows the reason
Require respondents to make analytical & deductive inferences – hard
The Xbox in Japan survey
47. “Why” Questions – How to Use “Why” can give many types of responses (“Why do you want to learn email?”):
programmatic (“Because it takes place at a convenient time.”)
personality (“Because I’m a joiner.”)
information (“Because a friend told me about it.”)
social influence (“Because my priest thought it would be good for me.”)
economic (“Because it was inexpensive.”)
outcomes (“Because I wanted to learn about the things they’re
teaching in the program.”)
personal motivation (“Because God directed me to join.”)
philosophical (“Because it was there.”)
Decide before the interview which of these types is valuable to your goals.
Word question to isolate that type
Social influence example: “What other people, if any, motivate you to want to learn email?”
48. Validity, Reliability, Representiveness Validity: Asking the right question
Reliability: Receiving the right response
Reducing Response Error
Representativeness: Generalizing results.
The answers are from the right people
Sample selection and sample size
Reducing Non-response Error
49. Reliability Similar results by comparable measures of the same construct
Two ways to measure reliability
Test-Retest:: stability over time
Split-Half: consistency across ratings within a multiple-item scale
Reliability is easier to determine than Validity
If a measure is valid, then it is reliable
If it is not reliable, it can not be valid
If it is reliable, it may or may not be valid
50. Introducing New Coke: Research Conducted 2000 interviews in 10 major markets:
Control for brand names; Storyboards and Mock Advertisements: Try? Switch? Be Upset?
Focus Groups: Mixed; loyal drinkers unfavorable.
Blind Taste Tests: n = 30,000-40,000
New vs. Old Coke: 55 vs. 45; vs. Pepsi: 54-46
Generalizability: n=191,000 in 13 cities; Blind taste tests of 4 new vs. old / Pepsi.
51. New Coke: Key Research Lessons Predictive Validity
Did not research impact of the Loss of Coke
Construct Validity:
Buy brand vs. prefer taste?
Reliability:
Discriminate/ Prefer
52. In-Class Group Discussion Suppose you have been recruited by Nintendo American to decide whether they should also enter the cell phone market like apple in the U.S.
Try to design a market survey questionnaire (no more than 10 questions) to collect important data to answer this question
What Kind of information you should collect?
How to make sure your questionnaire is valid, reliable and generalizable?
53. Sources of Error in Surveys Non-response bias due to refusals
Fear of consequences of participation, represents an invasion of privacy, anxiety about the subject
Inaccurate responses
Inability to respond: ignorance, memory problems, problems formulating an answer
Unwilling to respond accurately: concerns about invasion of privacy, time pressure/fatigue, prestige seeking/social responsibility, response style/bias
Error causes by interviewers
Providing clues to answers
Inadequate questioning or probing
54. Bias in Questions Bias = systematic differences in the measurement of a response
Recall bias
Cases more likely to remember than controls
Observer bias
Different interviewer – different interpretations
Different interpretation of similar questions
Reduce by structured questionnaire
Non-response bias
Those who respond are different from those who do not
Telephone interviews: more females
55. Watch Out: Garbage In, Garbage Out Behavioral Questions: Memory Biases
Omission
Telescoping
Attitude Questions: Confusion
Double-barreled, leading, ambiguous questions
Sensitive Questions: “Lying”
Item non-repsonse
Termination
Distortion
56. Examples of Questions from Consumer Surveys A survey for Black Flag said:
“A roach disk… poisons a roach slowly. The dying roach returns to the nest and after it dies is eaten by other roaches. In turn, these roaches become poisoned and die. How effective do you think this type of product would be in killing roaches?”
Not surprisingly, 79% said effective!
57. Reducing Response Errors How do respondents answer survey questions?
Guess
Randomly choose an option
Use Information from previous response: order effects
Social Desirability Bias
Memory (Forgetting) Use information available in the survey context to generate response
58. Improving Reliability: Increase Respondent Motivation Purpose of the Research, its legitimacy
Incentives to respond accurately
Monetary: $1; Affective: guilt ; Informative: Use research will be put to; Conative: sweepstakes etc.
Disentangle collecting data from selling
Personal questions at end
Include “Other ____” for own perspective
59. Improving Reliability: Reduce Respondent Effort Short questionnaire
Provide time it takes to respond.
Order of questions should aid memory
Provide mnemonic cues: decomposition
Most important measure should come first
Use closed-scaled responses when possible
60. Improving Reliability: Multiple Measures Ask a question in different ways and assess correlation of responses
“Attitude”: “bad-good” “poor-excellent”
“Intention”: try, buy, recommend, repurchase
Use Multiple scales: open- and closed-ended.
Max Price willing to pay/ price evaluation/ quantity @ different prices.
Counterbalance order of key measures:
General-Specific versus Specific-General
Measure respondent motivation and interest
61. Improving Reliability: Use Appropriate Method Does the respondents know the response?
Is it “accessible” to them?
Can they “explicate” it?
Can they “recall” it or merely “recognize” it?
Is the respondent willing to share the response?
Counter-biasing methods;
Anonymity and confidentiality
If not, supplement descriptive data with
Observation studies
Experimental studies
62. Questionnaire Design: Main Take-aways Questionnaire Design is like Advertising
The respondent is not interested in answering your questions.
You need to make it worth their while, and EASY for them to give you their opinions, behaviors.
Questionnaire Design is a Science
Use information about memory-models and attitude models to generate your questions.
Questionnaire Design is an Art
There is no substitute for experience, so
Carry out a pretest, revise and then do final draft
63. Topics Questionnaire Design
Paper Prototypes
64. Why Do We Prototype ? Get feedback on our design faster
Saves money
Experiment with alternative designs
Fix problems before producing the final product
Keep the design centered on the user
65. Fidelity in Prototyping Fidelity refers to the level of detail
High fidelity
Prototypes look like the final product
Low fidelity
Artists renditions with many details missing
66. Low-Fi Storyboards Where do storyboards come from?
Film & animation
Give you a “script” of important events
Leave out the details
Concentrate on the important interactions
In design, the storyboard is non-linear to support user action choices
67. Why Use Low-fi Prototypes? Traditional methods take too long.
Sketches -> prototype -> evaluate -> iterate
Can simulate the prototype
Sketches ->Evaluate -> Iterate
Sketches act as prototypes
Designer “plays the control unit”
Other team members observe and record
Sounds silly at first, but is surprisingly effective
Kindergarten implementation skills
Widely used in industry
68. Hi-Fi Disadvantages Distort perceptions of tester
Formal representation indicates “finished” nature
People comment on color, fonts, and alignment
Discourages major changes
Testers don’t want to change “a finished” design
Designers don’t want to loss effort put into creating hi-fi design
Time is lost on details
Discussion tends to be swallowed up on details, not the big-picture issues that matter most.
69. Constructing the Model Draw a window frame on large paper
Put different screen regions on cards
Anything that moves, changes, appears or disappears
Use greek-ing for text if needed
Squiggles stand for text not written yet
Use photocopier to make many versions
70. Summary Questionnaire Design
Low-fi/Paper Prototyping
71. Next Time Design Patterns
Design Pattern Languages, Jan Borchers, Chap 2 of “A Pattern Approach to Interaction Design”
The Contextual Inquiry and Task Analysis Assignment is out
Due in two weeks
Get an early start!