***Apologies for cross-posting

 

Dear colleagues,

 

We are excited to invite submissions for our upcoming session, “Exploring Agent-based Interviewing in Web Surveys”, at the 11th conference of the European Survey Research Association (ESRA), which takes place at Utrecht University, The Netherlands, from July 14 to July 18, 2025.

 

The session is organized by Jan Karem Höhne (DZHW, Leibniz University Hannover), Marco Angrisani (University of Southern California), Frederick Conrad (University of Michigan), Arie Kapteyn (University of Southern California), and Florian Keusch (University of Mannheim).

 

Please submit your abstract (max. 300 words) via the ESRA conference management system by December 20, 2024.

 

Session Description:

Web surveys continue to replace other survey modes, especially in-person interviews. Even large-scale surveys, such as the European Social Survey and the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, now routinely collect data via web surveys. However, the absence of interviewers complicates the provision of assistance to respondents and the creation of trust and motivation. This absence raises concern about answer quality. The advent of Generative Artificial Intelligence makes it possible to build interviewing agents that are visually realistic and conversationally responsive, deriving the latter ability from Large Language Models. Embedding such agents in web surveys promises to restore some of the quality-enhancing contributions of human interviews. Intelligent agents can clarify questions and provide feedback beyond what is typical in text-based web surveys and their mere presence can reduce speeding and non-differentiation but may introduce social desirability. Because respondents can choose an agent this may foster rapport helping to overcome social desirability. These innovations do not only give web surveys a human touch but make them more inclusive. Individuals with low literacy and education or who are not skilled speakers and/or readers of the survey language (e.g., immigrants and refugees) may be more likely to participate if they see (or hear) an agent that looks (or sounds) like them. Similarly, those with sensory challenges, especially the elderly, may favor verbal communication with a realistic looking, conversational agent, over text-based communication. In this session, we invite studies on all kinds of interviewing agents, not just those we have described here. This can be in various settings (lab or field) and with different study designs (cross-sectional or longitudinal). Contributions on legal and ethical considerations when using agent-based interviewing are also welcome. This similarly applies to studies that are work in progress.

 

If you have any questions about the session, please do not hesitate to reach out.

 

We are looking forward to your submissions.

 

Best regards

Jan Karem Höhne

 

German Centre for Higher Education Research and Science Studies (DZHW)

Lange Laube 12 |  30159 Hannover | www.dzhw.eu | Germany

 

Prof. Dr. Jan Karem Höhne

Head of CS3 Lab for Computational Survey and Social Science

Leibniz University Hannover

German Centre for Higher Education Research and Science Studies (DZHW)

Research Area 4: Research Infrastructure and Methods

Tel. +49 511 450670-458

Fax +49 511 450670-960

www.jkhoehne.eu

 

Upcoming and most recent publications:

- Höhne, J.K., Lenzner, T., & Claassen, J. (in press). Automatic speech-to-text transcription: Evidence from a smartphone survey with voice answers. International Journal of Social Research Methodology.

- Höhne, J.K., Claassen, J., Shahania, S., & Broneske, D. (2024). Bots in web survey interviews: A showcase. International Journal of Market Research. DOI: 10.1177/14707853241297009

- Salvatore, C., & Höhne, J.K. (in press). Explaining item-nonresponse in open questions with requests for voice responses. Conference Proceeding of the Italian Statistical Society.

- Höhne, J.K. & Claassen, J. (2024). Examining final comment questions with requests for written and oral answers. International Journal of Market Research. DOI: 10.1177/14707853241229329

- Höhne, J.K., Gavras, K., & Claassen, J. (2024). Typing or speaking? Comparing text and voice answers to open questions on sensitive topics in smartphone surveys. Social Science Computer Review. DOI: 10.1177/08944393231160961

- Lenzner, T., Höhne, J.K., & Gavras, K. (2024). Innovating web probing: Comparing written and oral answers to open-ended probing questions in a smartphone survey. Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology. DOI: 10.1093/jssam/smae031