From A-to-Z: Executing experimental methods with a focus on discrete choice experiments
- Introduction to experimental methods and discrete choice experiments (Session 1 & 2)
- Theoretical roots & experimental set-up decisions (Session 3)
- Hands on: Questionnaire design and survey setup (Session 4)
Day 2:
- Properties of suitable design and design generation techniques (Session 5)
- Estimation I: Basic techniques using Maximum Likelihood (Session 6)
- Estimation II: Advanced techniques using hierarchical bayes (Session 7)
- Hands on: Design generation & estimation (Session 8)
Day 3:
- Test for validity, interpretation and counterfactual simulations (Session 9)
- Advanced topics (Session 10)
- Hands on: Completion of study-preparations (Session 11)
- Presentation: Defense of planned study (Session 12)
Relevance of the course
Discrete Choice Experiments (DCEs) are an essential evidence based research tool to better understand and predict individual and group decisions made by managers, organizations, and consumers. DCEs are suited to empirically study frequently asked research questions from many disciplines, such as, e.g., consumers’ trade-off between product characteristics and price in Marketing; households’ trade-off between interest rates and risk in Household Finance; and app-users’ trade-off between capabilities and privacy concerns in Information Systems. This PhD course will enable researchers to set up and apply their own discrete choice experiment to their research questions.
Even though this course has a particular focus on preference measurement using discrete choice experiments, most of its studied and applied contents are generalizable to other experimental methods.
Software
During the course, you will apply the following software:
- DISE (http://www.dise-online.net/demo.aspx) for setting up the questionnaire
- XML Spy for setting up the questionnaire
- JMP for design generation
- Excel for estimation
- R for estimation
Prior experience with some of the software mentioned above is certainly helpful, but not a pre-condition. I developed this course such that also participants with no prior experience with any of the software can also follow.
Preparations
Before the course, please prepare the following:
- Carefully select the topic of your own study. I highly recommend choosing a topic that fits with your own doctoral research.
- Work through the manual of how to set-up a questionnaire using the survey platform DISE (http://www.dise-online.net/demo.aspx). You can access the manual as PDF: http://www.dise-online.com/userupload/dise-manual-en.pdf
- Register for an account and create a test-survey on the sandbox-server:
- If you are not in the WHU network: http://www.dise.sandbox.whu.edu/dise-online
- If you are in the WHU network: http://192.168.160.5/dise-online (both are the same server)The test-survey, should contain at least three pages, 1 radiobutton, 1 textbox, and 1 choice-set. Test your survey, whether everything works properly and access the results.
About 2 weeks, before the course starts, I will provide a guidance on selecting a topic for your study.
Date | Time |
---|---|
Tuesday, 04.07.2023 | 12:00 - 18:45 |
Wednesday, 05.07.2023 | 09:00 - 17:00 |
Tuesday, 11.07.2023 | 08:30 - 16:30 |
- Identify suitable experimental methods
- Gain a thorough understanding of the steps required for the planning and execution of experiments
- Gain hands-on experience on each step of setting up a discrete choice experiments.
- Understand the theoretical basis
- Learn about design generation techniques, study set-up, and interpretation of results
- Ability to critically reflect methodological issues
We will cover the most challenging parts – namely the careful planning of the study set-up andsurvey creation – together in class. The hands-on sessions at the end of the day ensure that youknow how to apply the contents, which we discussed throughout the day. You also must present,defend and discuss your prototypical study at the end of the third day.
The submission type is the powerpoint-presentation containing your study background, itsexperimental set-up, and its first results, ideally at the end of the third day.