by Michiel Bliemer » Sun Apr 26, 2020 11:04 am
A library of designs is not specifically discussed in the literature I think. It is something that I often do and recommend to others in courses I teach. I call it a "library of designs" but it essentially refers to multiple version of the survey where you link to specific questions dynamically based on responses from respondents. Therefore, it is a feature of the survey instrument, not so much of the design. You can often find multiple versions of surveys and dynamic links in online survey instruments like Qualtrics. In Ngene, you simply generate multiple designs as you normally would. While I thought this was straightforward, your comment tells me that maybe we should include a discussion on this in the Ngene manual.
Respondent-specific designs done with pen and paper ask respondents some questions in the beginning of the survey, and then depending on their answer, they state "Go to question X of this survey", referring to the appropriate set of questions for the respondent. This is the same way a library of designs works, it is simply a set of questions in the survey instrument that respondents are referred to dynamically within the survey instrument.
Advantages of a library of designs:
You create all designs a-priori and can check that all questions make sense. In a pivot design the levels are not known in advance and you do not know what attribute levels are provided by the respondent. For example, if the respondent puts in a price of 0 dollars, then relative pivots of -5% and +5% do not work. If a respondent puts in a price of 1 dollar, then an absolute pivot of -5 dollars does not work. If a respondent puts in a price of 85 dollar, then a relative pivot of +15% would mean 97.75 dollars, which would need rounding off. In other words, a pivot design requires careful implemation in the survey instrument, wwhereas a library of designs simply refers to the appropriate set of questions in the survey. In Ngene, pivot designs have several limitations, e.g. we require the inclusion of a reference alternative, while with a library of designs you have complete flexibility.
Disadvantage of a library of designs:
You need to create several sets of survey questions. For the study with more than 1000 different designs, it means implementing 1000 sets of questions in the survey instrument. Most people only have a limited library, for example 5 of 10, so it is often not a big issue.
A study where we generated 315 experimental designs is reported in Batley et al. (2019), although not many details are provided.
Batley, Bates, Bliemer, et al. (2019) New appraisal values for travel time saving and reliability in Great Britain. Transportation, Vol. 46, pp. 583-621.
Michiel