A Comparison of Value-Weight-Elicitation Methods for Accurate and Accessible Participatory Planning
This research analyzed six value-weight-elicitation techniques that are commonly used in participatory planning. It compared the techniques via measures of accuracy (within-subjects user-derived assessments and quantitative weight comparisons) and accessibility (time to complete, difficulty, and “boringness”). Visual sliders performed best across assessments. Pairwise comparison, visual sliders, and swing weighting were the most accurate, while visual sliders and vertical visual scale were the most accessible. Point allocation and the popular Likert-type method performed poorly across assessments. All methods produced similar weights, highlighting the importance of accessibility when choosing scales. This research can inform participatory planning and survey design techniques.
Research paper
Author(s)
Lorien Nesbitt*
Michael J. Meitner
Brent Chamberlain
Julian Gonzalez
William Trousdale
* Urban Natures Lab Team Member
Research Themes
Urban planning and governance
Environmental justice