TY - JOUR
T1 - Opening the 'Black Box': An Overview of Methods to Investigate the Decision-Making Process in Choice-Based Surveys.
AU - Rigby, Daniel
AU - Vass, Caroline
AU - Payne, Katherine
N1 - Funding Information:
Caroline M. Vass and Katherine Payne were supported in the preparation and submission of this article by Mind the Risk international network collaboration funded by the Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences. The views and opinions expressed are those of the authors, and not necessarily those of other Mind the Risk members or the Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2020/2
Y1 - 2020/2
N2 - The desire to understand the preferences of patients, healthcare professionals and the public continues to grow. Health valuation studies, often in the form of discrete choice experiments, a choice based survey approach, proliferate as a result. A variety of methods of pre-choice process analysis have been developed to investigate how and why people make their decisions in such experiments and surveys. These techniques have been developed to investigate how people acquire and process information and make choices. These techniques offer the potential to test and improve theories of choice and/or associated empirical models. This paper provides an overview of such methods, with the focus on their use in stated choice-based healthcare studies. The methods reviewed are eye tracking, mouse tracing, brain imaging, deliberation time analysis and think aloud. For each method, we summarise the rationale, implementation, type of results generated and associated challenges, along with a discussion of possible future developments.
AB - The desire to understand the preferences of patients, healthcare professionals and the public continues to grow. Health valuation studies, often in the form of discrete choice experiments, a choice based survey approach, proliferate as a result. A variety of methods of pre-choice process analysis have been developed to investigate how and why people make their decisions in such experiments and surveys. These techniques have been developed to investigate how people acquire and process information and make choices. These techniques offer the potential to test and improve theories of choice and/or associated empirical models. This paper provides an overview of such methods, with the focus on their use in stated choice-based healthcare studies. The methods reviewed are eye tracking, mouse tracing, brain imaging, deliberation time analysis and think aloud. For each method, we summarise the rationale, implementation, type of results generated and associated challenges, along with a discussion of possible future developments.
U2 - 10.1007/s40271-019-00385-8
DO - 10.1007/s40271-019-00385-8
M3 - Review article
SN - 1178-1653
VL - 13
SP - 31
EP - 41
JO - The Patient
JF - The Patient
IS - 1
ER -