Answering Autobiographical Questions: The Impact of Memory and Inference on Surveys
- 10 April 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 236 (4798), 157-161
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.3563494
Abstract
Survey questions often probe respondents for quantitative facts about events in their past: "During the last 2 weeks, on days when you drank liquor, about how many drinks did you have?" "During the past 12 months, how many visits did you make to a dentist?" "When did you last work at a full-time job?" are all examples from national surveys. Although questions like these make an implicit demand to remember and enumerate specific autobiographical episodes, respondents frequently have trouble complying because of limits on their ability to recall. In these situations, respondents resort to inferences that use partial information from memory to construct a numeric answer. Results from cognitive psychology can be useful in understanding and investigating these phenomena. In particular, cognitive research can help in identifying situations that inhibit or facilitate recall and can reveal inferences that affect the accuracy of respondents' answers.This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Assessing the Accuracy of Polls and SurveysScience, 1986
- Knowledge structures in the organization and retrieval of autobiographical memoriesCognitive Psychology, 1985
- Vivid memoriesCognition, 1984
- Memory for unique personal events: The roommate studyMemory & Cognition, 1982
- Directed search through autobiographical memoryMemory & Cognition, 1981
- Studies of inference from lack of knowledgeMemory & Cognition, 1981
- Flashbulb memoriesCognition, 1977
- The use of the decomposition principle in making judgmentsOrganizational Behavior and Human Performance, 1975
- Effects of Time and Memory Factors on Response in SurveysJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1973
- A Study of Response Errors in Expenditures Data from Household InterviewsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1964