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Testing the waters: Behavior across participant pools

By: Snowberg, Erik and Yariv, Leeat.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: The American Economic Review Description: 3(2), Feb, 2021: p.687-719.Subject(s): Survey Methods, Sampling Methods In: The American Economic ReviewSummary: We leverage a large-scale incentivized survey eliciting behaviors from (almost) an entire undergraduate university student population, a representative sample of the US population, and Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) to address concerns about the external validity of experiments with student participants. Behavior in the student population offers bounds on behaviors in other populations, and correlations between behaviors are similar across samples. Furthermore, non-student samples exhibit higher levels of noise. Adding historical lab participation data, we find a small set of attributes over which lab participants differ from non-lab participants. An additional set of lab experiments shows no evidence of observer effects. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
3(2), Feb, 2021: p.687-719 Available AR125178

We leverage a large-scale incentivized survey eliciting behaviors from (almost) an entire undergraduate university student population, a representative sample of the US population, and Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk) to address concerns about the external validity of experiments with student participants. Behavior in the student population offers bounds on behaviors in other populations, and correlations between behaviors are similar across samples. Furthermore, non-student samples exhibit higher levels of noise. Adding historical lab participation data, we find a small set of attributes over which lab participants differ from non-lab participants. An additional set of lab experiments shows no evidence of observer effects. – Reproduced

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