From Lab-Testing to Web-Testing in Cognitive Research: Who You Test is More Important than how You Test

The transition to , although promising, entails many new concerns. Web-testing is harder to monitor, so researchers need to ensure that the quality of the data collected is comparable to the quality of data typically achieved by . Our study yields a novel contribution to this issue, by being the fir...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of cognition Vol. 6; no. 1; p. 13
Main Authors Uittenhove, Kim, Jeanneret, Stephanie, Vergauwe, Evie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Ubiquity Press 19.01.2023
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Summary:The transition to , although promising, entails many new concerns. Web-testing is harder to monitor, so researchers need to ensure that the quality of the data collected is comparable to the quality of data typically achieved by . Our study yields a novel contribution to this issue, by being the first to distinguish between the impact of web-testing and the impact of sourcing individuals from different participant pools, including crowdsourcing platforms. We presented a fairly general working memory task to 196 MTurk participants, 300 Prolific participants, and 255 students from the University of Geneva, allowing for a comparison of data quality across different participant pools. Among university students, 215 were web-tested, and 40 were lab-tested, allowing for a comparison of testing modalities within the same participant pool. Data quality was measured by assessing multiple data characteristics (i.e., reaction time, accuracy, anomalous values) and the presence of two behavioral benchmark effects. Our results revealed that (i.e., participant pool) is more important than (i.e., testing modality). Concerning , our results showed that web-testing incurs a small, yet acceptable loss of data quality compared to lab-testing. Concerning , Prolific participants were almost indistinguishable from web-tested students, but MTurk participants differed drastically from the other pools. Our results therefore encourage the use of web-testing in the domain of cognitive psychology, even when using complex paradigms. Nevertheless, these results urge for caution regarding how researchers select web-based participant pools when conducting online research.
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ISSN:2514-4820
2514-4820
DOI:10.5334/joc.259