How different types of participant payments alter task performance

Researchers typically use incentives (such as money or course credit) in order to obtain participants who engage in the specific behaviors of interest to the researcher. There is, however, little understanding or agreement on the effects of different types and levels of incentives used. Some results...

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Main Author: Gary L. Brase
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Judgment and Decision Making 2009-08-01
Series:Judgment and Decision Making
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sjdm.org/9416/jdm9416.pdf
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spelling doaj-13628188419c483d9f2576996e16db382021-05-02T02:55:13ZengSociety for Judgment and Decision MakingJudgment and Decision Making1930-29752009-08-0145419428How different types of participant payments alter task performanceGary L. BraseResearchers typically use incentives (such as money or course credit) in order to obtain participants who engage in the specific behaviors of interest to the researcher. There is, however, little understanding or agreement on the effects of different types and levels of incentives used. Some results in the domain of statistical reasoning suggest that performance differences --- previously deemed theoretically important --- may actually be due to differences in incentive types across studies. 704 participants completed one of five variants of a statistical reasoning task, for which they received either course credit, flat fee payment, or performance-based payment incentives. Successful task completion was more frequent with performance-based incentives than with either of the other incentive types. Performance on moderately difficult tasks (compared to very easy and very hard tasks) was most sensitive to incentives. These results can help resolve existing debates about inconsistent findings, guide more accurate comparisons across studies, and be applied beyond research settings. http://journal.sjdm.org/9416/jdm9416.pdfparticipant methodologymonetary incentivesjudgments underuncertaintystatistical probabilityperformance.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gary L. Brase
spellingShingle Gary L. Brase
How different types of participant payments alter task performance
Judgment and Decision Making
participant methodology
monetary incentives
judgments underuncertainty
statistical probability
performance.
author_facet Gary L. Brase
author_sort Gary L. Brase
title How different types of participant payments alter task performance
title_short How different types of participant payments alter task performance
title_full How different types of participant payments alter task performance
title_fullStr How different types of participant payments alter task performance
title_full_unstemmed How different types of participant payments alter task performance
title_sort how different types of participant payments alter task performance
publisher Society for Judgment and Decision Making
series Judgment and Decision Making
issn 1930-2975
publishDate 2009-08-01
description Researchers typically use incentives (such as money or course credit) in order to obtain participants who engage in the specific behaviors of interest to the researcher. There is, however, little understanding or agreement on the effects of different types and levels of incentives used. Some results in the domain of statistical reasoning suggest that performance differences --- previously deemed theoretically important --- may actually be due to differences in incentive types across studies. 704 participants completed one of five variants of a statistical reasoning task, for which they received either course credit, flat fee payment, or performance-based payment incentives. Successful task completion was more frequent with performance-based incentives than with either of the other incentive types. Performance on moderately difficult tasks (compared to very easy and very hard tasks) was most sensitive to incentives. These results can help resolve existing debates about inconsistent findings, guide more accurate comparisons across studies, and be applied beyond research settings.
topic participant methodology
monetary incentives
judgments underuncertainty
statistical probability
performance.
url http://journal.sjdm.org/9416/jdm9416.pdf
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