Respondent burden in a Mobile App: evidence from a shopping receipt scanning study.

Authors

  • Brendan Read University of Essex

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2019.v1i1.7379

Keywords:

Subjective, Objective, Cumulative, Fatigue, Expenditure, Measurement of Consumption, Household Panel Survey

Abstract

This study considers the burden placed on participants, subjectively and objectively, when asked to use a mobile app to scan shopping receipts. Using data from both the Understanding Society Spending Study, and the ninth wave of the Understanding Society Innovation Panel allow measures of burden and related characteristics to be identified. Subjective and objective burden were found to be seemingly unrelated to one another. There is evidence of older respondents facing greater objective burden, however there was some evidence that this did not correspond to an increase in the levels of subjective burden reported. Reported willingness to participate in a task of a similar nature proved to be indicative of both objective and subjective burden.

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Published

2019-04-11

How to Cite

Read, B. (2019). Respondent burden in a Mobile App: evidence from a shopping receipt scanning study. Survey Research Methods, 13(1), 45–71. https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2019.v1i1.7379

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