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Correct Measurement-Error Bias
Why Correct for Measurement Error?
- In conjoint experiments, measurement error is
pervasive but often overlooked.
- Respondents may:
- Misread attributes
- Misunderstand levels
- Click randomly
- Forget information across tasks
- As a result, respondents’ recorded choices often refelect random
noise.
- This random error leads to attenuate true
prefernces (or true effects).
The Consequences of Ignoring Measurement Error
| Underestimates true preferences |
Provides more accurate preferences |
| Falsely suggests indifference |
Recovers meaningful trade-offs |
| Misleads theory building and application |
Provides accurate, unbiased insights |
How projoint Corrects for Measurement Error
- Estimates the intra-respondent reliability (IRR)
based on responses to a repeated task
- Adjusts marginal means (MMs) and average marginal component
effects (AMCEs) accordingly
- Provides corrected estimates that better reflect
respondents’ true preferences
- Corrected estimates reveal the true magnitude of effects,
improving both theoretical and applied inferences in
political science, marketing, and other fields.
✅ No additional respondent burden (just one repeated task)
✅ Minimal survey design changes
✅ Massive improvements in accuracy
Key Takeaway
🧠 Measurement error systematically biases results.
🔥 Correcting for measurement error reveals true preferences, sharper
trade-offs, and prevents misleading inferences.
📚 Key Reference
- Clayton, Horiuchi, Kaufman, King, Komisarchik
(Forthcoming).
“Correcting Measurement Error Bias in Conjoint Survey
Experiments.”
Forthcoming, American Journal of Political Science.
Pre-Print
Available
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.