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In-Brief Notes
Vol. 14, Issue 1, 2021September 09, 2021 EDT

Polling on police use of body cameras: The effect of response option order on distribution and concurrent validity

Dana Garbarski, Keyla Navarrete, David Doherty,
response option order effectspolicing
https://doi.org/10.29115/SP-2021-0009
Photo by Charles Fair on Unsplash
Survey Practice
Garbarski, Dana, Keyla Navarrete, and David Doherty. 2021. “Polling on Police Use of Body Cameras: The Effect of Response Option Order on Distribution and Concurrent Validity.” Survey Practice 14 (1). https:/​/​doi.org/​10.29115/​SP-2021-0009.
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Abstract

Debates on key features of policing are far from settled and are highly politicized. However, a majority of the public favors the use of body cameras when asked whether they favor or oppose their use. Knowing that “favoring” overall might encompass several perspectives, we sought to document how frequently the public thought police should use body cameras: all the time with no exceptions, all the time with minimal exceptions, some of the time, or never. We were then confronted with a perennial survey design issue—how to order these response options in our web survey? We randomly assigned respondents to receive one of two response option orderings: from “never” to “all the time with no exceptions” and the reverse. Because we asked respondents about their support for or attitudes about items related to policing, we had the opportunity to examine the concurrent validity of each of the two versions of the item by examining their correlation with the related items. Overall, the results suggest when polling about police use of body cameras in terms of relative frequencies, the response options should be ordered starting with “never” or the lowest frequency.

The United States is engaged in a national conversation on policing. Debates on key features of policing are far from settled and are highly politicized. However, one point seems to have some convergence among the public and police: a majority of each favor the use of body cameras—66% of officers and 93% of the public—when asked whether they favor or oppose their use (Parker 2017).

Knowing that “favoring” overall might encompass several perspectives, we sought to document how frequently the public thought police should use body cameras: all the time with no exceptions, all the time with minimal exceptions, some of the time, or never. We were then confronted with a perennial survey design issue—how to order these response options in our web survey?

Beginning with the least desirable response option increases the likelihood that respondents consider a range of response options (Bradburn, Sudman, and Wansink 2004; Sudman and Bradburn 1982). Given the overwhelming public support favoring police use of body cameras, this suggests starting with “never.” However, we wanted to empirically examine whether doing so improved data quality. Thus, we randomly assigned respondents to receive one of two response option orderings: from “never” to “all the time with no exceptions” and the reverse. Importantly, because we asked respondents about their support for or attitudes about items related to policing, we had the opportunity to examine the concurrent validity of each of the two versions of the item by examining their correlation with the related items.

We fielded our survey from February through March 2021 using an online panel of respondents from Dynata, achieving a 65% participation rate (N=1,195). The population was adult residents of Cook County, IL, which includes Chicago and its immediate suburbs. The survey was administered in English, and individual questions were administered page-by-page.

Table 1 shows that response distributions varied by scale direction. Respondents were more likely to choose “all the time with no exceptions” when it was the first option listed compared to the last, and respondents were more likely to choose “some of the time” when “never” was presented first compared to last. This is consistent with the literature on response option order effects: options near the beginning of the scale, particularly the first response option respondents perceive as acceptable, are more likely to be chosen (Garbarski, Schaeffer, and Dykema 2019; Krosnick 1991; Yan and Keusch 2015; Yan, Keusch, and He 2018). We also confirmed that the difference in the distribution by response option order is largely similar across device type (desktop/laptop vs. smartphone/tablet, not shown) (Krebs and Höhne 2021; Leon, Aizpurua, and van der Valk, Forthcoming).

Table 1.Distribution of Frequency of Police Use of Body Cameras by Response Option Ordering among Cook County Residents, Dynata (February–March 2021).
"All the Time" to "Never" "Never" to "All the Time"
All the time with no exception 63.8% 56.5%
All the time with minimal exception 25.6% 25.8%
Some of the time 7.8% 15.1%
Never 2.9% 2.6%
N 618% 577%

Notes. Columns sum to 100%. Chi-square (df=3) = 16.84, p<0.001, Cramer’s V=0.119
Question text: Police use of body-worn cameras varies across municipalities. When do you think police should use body worn cameras?

• All the time with no exceptions

• All the time with minimal exceptions (for example, when requested by the victim of a crime)

• Some of the time (for example, when investigating criminal activity but not when interviewing witnesses)

• Never

This question was presented vertically in all modes.

Table 2 shows the correlations between each version of the body camera question and criteria of interest. When the response options for body camera are ordered from “never” to “all the time with no exceptions,” the correlation is larger between body camera use and the following items: support for prosecuting police for use of excessive force and how well the police in the suburbs are doing using the right amount of force for each situation and treating people fairly, regardless of race or ethnicity.

Table 2.Polychoric Correlations of Frequency of Police Use of Body Cameras with Criteria among Cook County Residents, Dynata (February–March 2021).
Overall "All the Time" to "Never" "Never" to "All the Time"
Support for police licensing 0.38 0.40 0.36
(higher score indicates more support)
N 1,195 618 577
Support for prosecuting police for excessive force 0.39 0.30 0.47***
(higher score indicates more support)
N 1,195 618 577
Police use of force in city -0.24 -0.19 -0.28
(higher score indicates worse rating)
N 1,195 618 577
Police use of force in suburbs -0.16 -0.09 -0.22*
(higher score indicates worse rating)
N 1,194 618 576
Police treat people fairly in city -0.28 -0.24 -0.32
(higher score indicates worse rating)
N 1,195 618 577
Police treat people fairly in suburbs -0.21 -0.15 -0.26*
(higher score indicates worse rating)
N 1,194 617 577

Notes. Tests of whether the correlations between police body camera use and each criterion are significantly different across the response option order of police body camera use were conducted on quantpsy.org using Fisher’s r-to-z transformation.

Question texts:
Q30: Occupational licensing exists to verify the training, testing, and education of people in certain professions, such as electricians and dental hygienists. If occupational licensing were required for police officers, an officer’s license could be suspended if they are arrested or indicted for a felony. The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board would hear the officer’s case and decide whether their license should remain suspended.

How much do you support or oppose a proposal that requires police officers to be licensed?

Strongly support, somewhat support, neither support nor oppose, somewhat oppose, strongly oppose

Q31: How much do you support or oppose a proposal to prosecute police officers who use excessive force?

Strongly support, somewhat support, neither support nor oppose, somewhat oppose, strongly oppose

Q34: How would you rate the job police officers in the city of Chicago are doing when it comes to using the right amount of force for each situation? Very good, good, poor, very poor

Q35: How would you rate the job police officers in the Chicago suburbs are doing when it comes to using the right amount of force for each situation? Very good, good, poor, very poor

Q36: How would you rate the job police officers in the city of Chicago are doing when it comes to treating people fairly regardless of race or ethnicity? Very good, good, poor, very poor

Q37: How would you rate the job police officers in the Chicago suburbs are doing when it comes to treating people fairly regardless of race or ethnicity? Very good, good, poor, very poor

Respondents were randomly assigned to receive very good–very poor or very poor–very good for Q34–37. The distribution of these items does not vary by response option order, so we combine across response option order for analysis.

Overall, the results suggest when polling about police use of body cameras in terms of relative frequencies, the response options should be ordered starting with “never” or the lowest frequency.

Submitted: June 02, 2021 EDT

Accepted: July 14, 2021 EDT

References

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