Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments: a case study on food safety

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskning

Standard

Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments : a case study on food safety. / Olsen, Søren Bøye; Campbell, Danny; Mørkbak, Morten Raun.

2012. Paper præsenteret ved European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, Prague, Tjekkiet.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskning

Harvard

Olsen, SB, Campbell, D & Mørkbak, MR 2012, 'Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments: a case study on food safety', Paper fremlagt ved European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, Prague, Tjekkiet, 27/06/2012 - 30/06/2012. <http://www.webmeets.com/EAERE/2012/prog/viewpaper.asp?pid=581>

APA

Olsen, S. B., Campbell, D., & Mørkbak, M. R. (2012). Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments: a case study on food safety. Paper præsenteret ved European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, Prague, Tjekkiet. http://www.webmeets.com/EAERE/2012/prog/viewpaper.asp?pid=581

Vancouver

Olsen SB, Campbell D, Mørkbak MR. Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments: a case study on food safety. 2012. Paper præsenteret ved European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, Prague, Tjekkiet.

Author

Olsen, Søren Bøye ; Campbell, Danny ; Mørkbak, Morten Raun. / Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments : a case study on food safety. Paper præsenteret ved European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, Prague, Tjekkiet.14 s.

Bibtex

@conference{e201029b42814ff89bc0cbd0f203036f,
title = "Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments: a case study on food safety",
abstract = "In the current study, we explore the potential impact of using different opt-out definitions in a case study concerning consumer preferences for quality and food safety attributes in chicken fillets. Specifically, we focus on the impact on opt-out effects. Using three different opt-out definitions in split samples we find a significant impact on the deterministic part of the opt-out effect whereas we find no impact on the stochastic part of the opt-out effect. Furthermore, to test for respondents' potential use of a simplifying heuristic in terms of resorting to the opt-out when choice tasks are difficult, we incorporate the utility balance between the experimentally designed alternatives in the likelihood function. We find that increased utility balance increases the opt-out effect in terms of increased likelihood of a opt-out choice when choices are difficult. Interestingly, we find that this heuristic has a larger impact when the opt-out is defined as respondents own typical (perceived) purchase than when defined as a none-of-these or a provided hypothetical alternative. We consequently stress the importance for researchers to be aware of these possible implications related to the definition of opt-out alternatives in choice experiments.",
author = "Olsen, {S{\o}ren B{\o}ye} and Danny Campbell and M{\o}rkbak, {Morten Raun}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
note = "European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, EAERE ; Conference date: 27-06-2012 Through 30-06-2012",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Assessing the impact of opt-out definitions in choice experiments

T2 - European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists

AU - Olsen, Søren Bøye

AU - Campbell, Danny

AU - Mørkbak, Morten Raun

N1 - Conference code: 19

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - In the current study, we explore the potential impact of using different opt-out definitions in a case study concerning consumer preferences for quality and food safety attributes in chicken fillets. Specifically, we focus on the impact on opt-out effects. Using three different opt-out definitions in split samples we find a significant impact on the deterministic part of the opt-out effect whereas we find no impact on the stochastic part of the opt-out effect. Furthermore, to test for respondents' potential use of a simplifying heuristic in terms of resorting to the opt-out when choice tasks are difficult, we incorporate the utility balance between the experimentally designed alternatives in the likelihood function. We find that increased utility balance increases the opt-out effect in terms of increased likelihood of a opt-out choice when choices are difficult. Interestingly, we find that this heuristic has a larger impact when the opt-out is defined as respondents own typical (perceived) purchase than when defined as a none-of-these or a provided hypothetical alternative. We consequently stress the importance for researchers to be aware of these possible implications related to the definition of opt-out alternatives in choice experiments.

AB - In the current study, we explore the potential impact of using different opt-out definitions in a case study concerning consumer preferences for quality and food safety attributes in chicken fillets. Specifically, we focus on the impact on opt-out effects. Using three different opt-out definitions in split samples we find a significant impact on the deterministic part of the opt-out effect whereas we find no impact on the stochastic part of the opt-out effect. Furthermore, to test for respondents' potential use of a simplifying heuristic in terms of resorting to the opt-out when choice tasks are difficult, we incorporate the utility balance between the experimentally designed alternatives in the likelihood function. We find that increased utility balance increases the opt-out effect in terms of increased likelihood of a opt-out choice when choices are difficult. Interestingly, we find that this heuristic has a larger impact when the opt-out is defined as respondents own typical (perceived) purchase than when defined as a none-of-these or a provided hypothetical alternative. We consequently stress the importance for researchers to be aware of these possible implications related to the definition of opt-out alternatives in choice experiments.

M3 - Paper

Y2 - 27 June 2012 through 30 June 2012

ER -

ID: 47933516