Publication | Closed Access
Strategies to Secure Compliance for a Mall Intercept Interview
147
Citations
14
References
1988
Year
EngineeringShopping MallUsable SecurityInformation SecurityConsumer ResearchLawInformation ForensicsResearch EthicsCommunicationVolunteer BiasSurvey (Human Research)Mall Intercept InterviewConversation AnalysisMall Intercept SurveysUser PerceptionCompliance ManagementBehavioral SciencesSecurity ManagementUser ExperienceData SecurityInterpersonal CommunicationInteractive MarketingSecurityHuman InteractionHuman-computer InteractionArtsSurvey MethodologyNonverbal Communication
Subjects in a shopping mall were approached with a request to participate in a survey. Half the subjects were touched and gazed at by interviewers and the other half were not. These nonverbal techniques increased compliance to participate in the interviewing task and somewhat decreased respondents' perceived burden. The touch and no-touch groups did not differ in response quality, apparent response bias, or volunteer bias. Compliance was related to the gender of the interviewer but not related to that of the respondent. Implications for mall intercept surveys are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1