Discover 3 peer-reviewed studies in Information Collection (2023–2025). Explore research findings powered by Prolific's diverse participant panel.
This page lists 3 peer-reviewed papers in the research area of Information Collection in the Prolific Citations Library, a curated collection of research powered by high-quality human data from Prolific.
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Authors: M Brassil, É Duncan, C Greene, B Mac Síthigh
Year: 2025
Published in: 2025 - osf.io
Institution: University College Dublin
Research Area: Eyewitness Memory, Misinformation Effect, Behavioral Research Methods, Online Data Collection Platforms
Discipline: Psychology
The study found that data collection contexts significantly influence susceptibility to eyewitness misinformation, with Prolific participants being less accurate and more susceptible compared to Laboratory or general online participants.
Methods: Two studies were conducted comparing eyewitness misinformation susceptibility across Laboratory, Prolific, and General Online participant groups under varying visual perceptual load conditions.
Key Findings: Eyewitness misinformation susceptibility and recall accuracy across Laboratory, Prolific, and General Online participant groups; the effect of visual perceptual load on recall accuracy.
Citations: 1
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Authors: S Kwon, NL Kim
Year: 2025
Published in: International Textile and Apparel ..., 2025 - iastatedigitalpress.com
Institution: University of Minnesota
Research Area: Social Media Advertising, Consumer Perception, Information Collection Ethics in Marketing, Social Science.
Discipline: Social Science, Marketing
Consumers are more willing to disclose personal information in social media advertising when they perceive exchanged benefits, such as monetary rewards and personalized recommendations, outweigh the risks; the method of information collection (overt vs. covert) does not significantly affect this decision.
Methods: An online survey was conducted among U.S. Instagram users to assess attitudes toward benefit-risk trade-offs in personal data disclosure for advertising purposes.
Key Findings: Willingness to disclose personal information, click-through intentions, and purchase intentions based on perceived benefits and risks in social media advertisements.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.31274/itaa.18830
Citations: 1
Sample Size: 199
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Authors: S Kwon
Year: 2023
Published in: 2024 - search.proquest.com
Research Area: Social Media Advertising, Consumer Behavior, Information Collection
Discipline: Social Science