A response-time-based latent response mixture model for identifying and modeling careless and insufficient effort responding in survey data

Journal articleResearchPeer reviewed

Publication data


ByEsther Ulitzsch, Steffi Pohl, Lale Khorramdel, Ulf Kroehne, Matthias von Davier
Original languageEnglish
Published inPsychometrika, 87(2)
Pages593-619
Editor (Publisher)Springer
ISSN0033-3123
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11336-021-09817-7 (Open Access)
Publication statusPublished – 06.2022

Careless and insufficient effort responding (C/IER) can pose a major threat to data quality and, as such, to validity of inferences drawn from questionnaire data. A rich body of methods aiming at its detection has been developed. Most of these methods can detect only specific types of C/IER patterns. However, typically different types of C/IER patterns occur within one data set and need to be accounted for. We present a model-based approach for detecting manifold manifestations of C/IER at once. This is achieved by leveraging response time (RT) information available from computer-administered questionnaires and integrating theoretical considerations on C/IER with recent psychometric modeling approaches. The approach a) takes the specifics of attentive response behavior on questionnaires into account by incorporating the distance–difficulty hypothesis, b) allows for attentiveness to vary on the screen-by-respondent level, c) allows for respondents with different trait and speed levels to differ in their attentiveness, and d) at once deals with various response patterns arising from C/IER. The approach makes use of item-level RTs. An adapted version for aggregated RTs is presented that supports screening for C/IER behavior on the respondent level. Parameter recovery is investigated in a simulation study. The approach is illustrated in an empirical example, comparing different RT measures and contrasting the proposed model-based procedure against indicator-based multiple-hurdle approaches.