What over 1,000,000 participants tell us about online research protocols

被引:2
|
作者
Tomczak, Johanna [1 ]
Gordon, Andrew [2 ]
Adams, Jamie [1 ]
Pickering, Jade S. [1 ]
Hodges, Nick [1 ]
Evershed, Jo K. [1 ]
机构
[1] St Johns Innovat Ctr, Gorilla Expt Builder, Cauldron Sci, Cambridge, England
[2] Prolific, London, England
来源
关键词
online research; online methods; survey research methods; behavioral research methods; experimental psychology; crowdsourcing; research methodology; WEB;
D O I
10.3389/fnhum.2023.1228365
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
With the ever-increasing adoption of tools for online research, for the first time we have visibility on macro-level trends in research that were previously unattainable. However, until now this data has been siloed within company databases and unavailable to researchers. Between them, the online study creation and hosting tool Gorilla Experiment Builder and the recruitment platform Prolific hold metadata gleaned from millions of participants and over half a million studies. We analyzed a subset of this data (over 1 million participants and half a million studies) to reveal critical information about the current state of the online research landscape that researchers can use to inform their own study planning and execution. We analyzed this data to discover basic benchmarking statistics about online research that all researchers conducting their work online may be interested to know. In doing so, we identified insights related to: the typical study length, average completion rates within studies, the most frequent sample sizes, the most popular participant filters, and gross participant activity levels. We present this data in the hope that it can be used to inform research choices going forward and provide a snapshot of the current state of online research.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] What goes the research tell us about couple and family therapies?
    Lebow, J
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 56 (08) : 1083 - 1094
  • [32] WHAT NON-COMPLETION OF AN INTERVENTION DATA COLLECTION CAN TELL US ABOUT THE PARTICIPANTS
    Menne, H. L.
    Johnson, J.
    GERONTOLOGIST, 2016, 56 : 648 - 648
  • [33] Online disclosure of suicide method: What can online posts tell us about suicidal planning?
    Ammerman, Brooke A.
    Mcclure, Kenneth
    Law, Keyne C.
    O'Loughlin, Caitlin M.
    Jacobucci, Ross
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH, 2025, 181 : 503 - 508
  • [34] What the online manipulation of linguistic activity can tell us about language and thought
    Perry, Lynn K.
    Lupyan, Gary
    FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2013, 7
  • [35] What does the 'chat' tell us about participation and engagement in online video conferencing?
    Stokoe, Elizabeth
    Wong, Jessica Win See
    Hansen, Jessica Pedersen Belisle
    Roland, Damian
    Davis, Tessa
    LEARNING CULTURE AND SOCIAL INTERACTION, 2024, 45
  • [36] Associations between access to healthcare, environmental quality, and end-stage renal disease survival time: Proportional-hazards models of over 1,000,000 people over 14 years
    Kosnik, Marissa B.
    Reif, David M.
    Lobdell, Danelle T.
    Astell-Burt, Thomas
    Feng, Xiaoqi
    Hader, John D.
    Hoppin, Jane A.
    PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (03):
  • [37] What auctioning the human genome might tell us about research funding
    Kondro, W
    LANCET, 1996, 348 (9033): : 1026 - 1026
  • [39] WHAT DO MARSHMALLOWS AND GOLF TELL US ABOUT NATURAL RECOVERY RESEARCH?
    Miller, Peter M.
    Smith, Joshua P.
    ADDICTION, 2010, 105 (09) : 1521 - 1522
  • [40] WHAT INTEGRATED INTERDISCIPLINARY AND TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH MAY TELL US ABOUT ADDICTION
    Potenza, Marc N.
    ADDICTION, 2010, 105 (05) : 792 - 793