Hi Michiel,
First of all, I would like to appreciate your massive support. My question is about a particular design with two stages. At the first stage, respondents are supposed to choose an alternative based on the first set of attributes. Then, more attributes (the second sets of attributes) are shown to them while the previous attributes are still available with the same attribute levels and they are asked to make their second choice. The purpose is being able to compare respondents' choices when more information is provided. In this case, I think there are two ways of design:
1- Creating two separate designs in a way that the first design is based on the first set of attributes and the second one is based on the second set of attributes. Then, for the first stage of the survey, we just show the choice sets of the first design and after their first decision, for the second stage, we add the choice sets of the second design to the first one shown to respondents.
2- Producing one single design with all attributes (two sets of attributes). Then, for the first part, we remove the second set of attributes from the choice set and then after the first choice we add them and ask respondents to make their second choice.
I was wondering which design is preferred while minimizing the correlation between two sets of attributes? If there is a more efficient design, I would be grateful if you let me know.
Thanks.