Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading Direction

Because response scales serve as orientation for respondents when mapping their answers to response categories, it can be expected that the decremental (from positive to negative) or incremental (from negative to positive) order of a response scale provides information that influences response behav...

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Main Authors: Daagmar Krebs, Yaacov G. Bachner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Mannheim 2018-01-01
Series:Methoden, Daten, Analysen
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mda.gesis.org/index.php/mda/article/view/2017.08/223
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spelling doaj-4f6f2cb33a8f49e699b6f9299f2740672020-11-25T00:09:39ZengGESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, MannheimMethoden, Daten, Analysen1864-69562190-49362018-01-0112110.12758/mda.2017.08Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading DirectionDaagmar KrebsYaacov G. BachnerBecause response scales serve as orientation for respondents when mapping their answers to response categories, it can be expected that the decremental (from positive to negative) or incremental (from negative to positive) order of a response scale provides information that influences response behavior. If respondents interpret the first category on a scale as signifying “most accepted,” then starting an agree/disagree scale with “agree completely” or “disagree completely” may result in their forming different subjective hypotheses about the “most acceptable” response. If this principle applies in general, respondents’ reactions to horizontal response scales with different orders of response categories should be similar in the two directions of reading – right to left or left to right. This paper tests two hypotheses: first, that decremental scales elicit more positive responses than incremental scales; second, that this pattern holds under the condition of different reading direction. These hypotheses were tested using a German and an Israeli student sample. Seven-point decremental and incremental scales were applied in each sample; only the scale endpoints were verbally labeled. The questions asked related to extrinsic and intrinsic job motivation and achievement motivation. For data collection, a split-ballot design with random assignment of respondents to decremental and incremental scales was applied in both samples. Results revealed that response-order effects occur similarly in the right-to-left and the left-to-right reading direction.https://mda.gesis.org/index.php/mda/article/view/2017.08/223response-order effectscale directionreading direction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daagmar Krebs
Yaacov G. Bachner
spellingShingle Daagmar Krebs
Yaacov G. Bachner
Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading Direction
Methoden, Daten, Analysen
response-order effect
scale direction
reading direction
author_facet Daagmar Krebs
Yaacov G. Bachner
author_sort Daagmar Krebs
title Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading Direction
title_short Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading Direction
title_full Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading Direction
title_fullStr Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading Direction
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Rating Scale Direction under the Condition of Different Reading Direction
title_sort effects of rating scale direction under the condition of different reading direction
publisher GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences, Mannheim
series Methoden, Daten, Analysen
issn 1864-6956
2190-4936
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Because response scales serve as orientation for respondents when mapping their answers to response categories, it can be expected that the decremental (from positive to negative) or incremental (from negative to positive) order of a response scale provides information that influences response behavior. If respondents interpret the first category on a scale as signifying “most accepted,” then starting an agree/disagree scale with “agree completely” or “disagree completely” may result in their forming different subjective hypotheses about the “most acceptable” response. If this principle applies in general, respondents’ reactions to horizontal response scales with different orders of response categories should be similar in the two directions of reading – right to left or left to right. This paper tests two hypotheses: first, that decremental scales elicit more positive responses than incremental scales; second, that this pattern holds under the condition of different reading direction. These hypotheses were tested using a German and an Israeli student sample. Seven-point decremental and incremental scales were applied in each sample; only the scale endpoints were verbally labeled. The questions asked related to extrinsic and intrinsic job motivation and achievement motivation. For data collection, a split-ballot design with random assignment of respondents to decremental and incremental scales was applied in both samples. Results revealed that response-order effects occur similarly in the right-to-left and the left-to-right reading direction.
topic response-order effect
scale direction
reading direction
url https://mda.gesis.org/index.php/mda/article/view/2017.08/223
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