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Animal Ethics Biosafety Human Research Ethics Research Integrity

Identifying and preventing fraudulent responses in online public health surveys: Lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic (Papers: June Wang et. al. | August 2023)

Posted by Connar Allen in Human Research Ethics on September 8, 2023
Keywords: Biomedical, Good practice, Human research ethics, Medical research, Researcher responsibilities

The Linked Original Item was Posted On August, 23 2023 10:26:31

A woman completing an online survey on a laptop.

Abstract

As anyone who has conducted online surveys and other online research knows, it can be difficult to screen out people who do not meet the inclusion criteria. This can be especially difficult when participants are to be provided with some form of financial or other gratuity. This open access paper shares reflections from some experienced researchers on how to safeguard online health research.  Failing to do so may skew the results and compromise the research.

Web-based survey data collection has become increasingly popular, and limitations on in-person data collection during the COVID-19 pandemic have fueled this growth. However, the anonymity of the online environment increases the risk of fraudulent responses provided by bots or those who complete surveys to receive incentives, a major risk to data integrity. As part of a study of COVID-19 and the return to in-person school, we implemented a web-based survey of parents in Maryland between December 2021 and July 2022. Recruitment relied, in part, on social media advertisements. Despite implementing many existing best practices, we found the survey challenged by sophisticated fraudsters. In response, we iteratively improved survey security. In this paper, we describe efforts to identify and prevent fraudulent online survey responses. Informed by this experience, we provide specific, actionable recommendations for identifying and preventing online survey fraud in future research. Some strategies can be deployed within the data collection platform such as careful crafting of survey links, Internet Protocol address logging to identify duplicate responses, and comparison of client-side and server-side time stamps to identify responses that may have been completed by respondents outside of the survey’s target geography. Other strategies can be implemented during the survey design phase. These approaches include the use of a 2-stage design in which respondents must be eligible on a preliminary screener before receiving a personalized link. Other design-based strategies include within-survey and cross-survey validation questions, the addition of “speed bump” questions to thwart careless or computerized responders, and the use of optional open-ended survey questions to identify fraudsters. We describe best practices for ongoing monitoring and post-completion survey data review and verification, including algorithms to expedite some aspects of data review and quality assurance. Such strategies are increasingly critical to safeguarding survey-based public health research.

Wang J, Calderon G, Hager ER, Edwards LV, Berry AA, Liu Y, Dinh, J., Summers, A.C., Connor, K.A., Collins, M.E., Prichett, L., Marshall, B.R. & Johns. S.B. (2023) Identifying and preventing fraudulent responses in online public health surveys: Lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic. PLOS Glob Public Health 3(8): e0001452. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001452
Publisher (Open Access): https://journals.plos.org/globalpublichealth/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgph.0001452

Identifying and preventing fraudulent responses in online public health surveys: Lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic
Web-based survey data collection has become increasingly popular, and limitations on in-person data collection during the COVID-19 pandemic have fueled this growth. However, the anonymity of the online environment increases the risk of fraudulent responses provided by bots or those who complete surv…

Related Reading

(Australia) ‘Compromised’ survey data leads to article retraction and university investigation – Retraction Watch (Marcus Banks | May 2023)

How to safeguard online data collection against fraud – Spectrum (Grace Huckins | March 2021)

All take and no give? Many scientists resist shift to open data – Times Higher Education (John Elmes | April 2017)

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