ISPS ID:
D173
Suggested citation:
Peyton, K., Huber, G., & Coppock, A. (2022). Replication materials for, ‘The Generalizability of Online Experiments Conducted During the COVID-19 Pandemic.’ http://hdl.handle.net/10079/ab42fc53-bc66-4aee-896c-c9c354202760. ISPS Data Archive.
Keyword(s):
Research design:
Field Date:
2020-03 - 2020-07
Location:
Location details:
American respondents on Lucid
Unit of observation:
Individual
Sample size:
1000 per survey
Inclusion/exclusion:
Between March and July 2020, we recruited weekly samples of approximately 1,000 US-based participants via Lucid. Lucid collects demographic information from all respondents before they enter any particular survey, enabling the construction of quota samples that approximate US census margins
Randomization procedure:
Lucid platform randomization
Treatment:
Study 1: American reporters in Russia; Study 2: Framing of purchases; Study 3: Gain versus loss framing; Study 4: welfare versus aid to the poor framing; Study 5: Gain versus loss framing with party endorsements; Study 6: Correcting misperceptions about foreign aid; Study 7: Perceived intentionality of side effects; Study 8: Prospective versus retrospective regarding military action; Study 9: Characteristics of immigrants (conjoint); Study 10: Correcting fake news; Study 11: Inequality graph, appears to be steeper
Treatment administration:
Web delivered
Outcome measures:
system justification,belief in fake news,immigrant preference,military action preference,perceived intentionality,support for foreign aid,party preference,opinion toward welfare,framing preferences
Archive date:
2022
Terms of use:
ISPS Data Archive: Terms of Use.
Discipline:
Area of study: