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@article{ Tsuchiya2010,
 title = {Elaborate item count questioning: why do people underreport in item count responses?},
 author = {Tsuchiya, Takahiro and Hirai, Yoko},
 journal = {Survey Research Methods},
 number = {3},
 pages = {139-149},
 volume = {4},
 year = {2010},
 issn = {1864-3361},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2010.v4i3.4620},
 abstract = {"The item count technique, used often to investigate illegal or socially undesirable behaviors, requires respondents to indicate merely the number of applicable items from among a list. However, the number of applicable items indicated via the item count question tends to be smaller than when it is calculated from the direct 'applies/ does not apply' responses to each item. Because this inconsistency, which we refer to as the underreporting effect, often disturbs proper item count estimates, the causes of this effect are explored in this paper. Web survey results revealed that the order of the response alternatives is irrelevant to the underreporting effect, and that the underreporting effect is caused by the response format in which the item count question requests merely the number of applicable items and not the number of non-applicable items. It is also shown that the magnitude of the underreporting effect decreases when the respondents are asked to indicate the numbers of both applicable and non-applicable items, which the authors refer to as elaborate item count questioning." (author's abstract)},
 keywords = {Methodenforschung; methodological research; Befragung; survey; Antwortverhalten; response behavior; empirische Sozialforschung; empirical social research; Fragebogen; questionnaire; Anonymität; anonymity; Messung; measurement; Messinstrument; measurement instrument; Fehler; error; Gruppe; group; Vergleich; comparison; Konsistenz; consistency}}