Abstract

This article provides an overview of the recent literature on the use of internet-based testing to address important questions in perception research. Our goal is to provide a starting point for the perception researcher who is keen on assessing this tool for their own research goals. Internet-based testing has several advantages over in-lab research, including the ability to reach a relatively broad set of participants and to quickly and inexpensively collect large amounts of empirical data, via services such as Amazon’s Mechanical Turk or Prolific Academic. In many cases, the quality of online data appears to match that collected in lab research. Generally-speaking, online participants tend to be more representative of the population at large than those recruited for lab based research. There are, though, some important caveats, when it comes to collecting data online. It is obviously much more difficult to control the exact parameters of stimulus presentation (such as display characteristics) with online research. There are also some thorny ethical elements that need to be considered by experimenters. Strengths and weaknesses of the online approach, relative to others, are highlighted, and recommendations made for those researchers who might be thinking about conducting their own studies using this increasingly-popular approach to research in the psychological sciences.

Highlights

  • Over the last few years, the rapid growth of online research has revolutionized the way in which many experimental psychologists choose to conduct their research

  • Outline of the present article In this article, our goal is to provide an up-to-date overview of the pros and cons associated with conducting research online for those perception scientists who are considering supplementing their own lab-based research with this powerful new research methodology

  • Following on from this, we explore the various concerns that have been raised with regard to online research, focusing on timing-related issues and how the wide variety of hardware/software that may be used by one’s participants can give rise to data problems

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Summary

Introduction

Over the last few years, the rapid growth of online research has revolutionized the way in which many experimental psychologists choose to conduct (at least some of) their research. How to cite this article Woods et al (2015), Conducting perception research over the internet: a tutorial review. Started to work/publish in this area is that relatively large numbers of participants (>100) can be collected in a comparatively short space of time (e.g., in less than 24 h, and often in less than 1 h) at relatively low cost (1-2 USD/participant/10 min). Speaking, such data collection can be achieved with relatively little effort on the part of the experimenters concerned

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