TL;DR: Cognitive Interviewing: A Tool for Improving Questionnaire as mentioned in this paper describes a means of systematically developing survey questions through investigations that intensively probe the thought processes of individuals who are presented with those inquiries.
Abstract: Cognitive Interviewing: A Tool for Improving Questionnaire
Design describes a means of systematically developing survey
questions through investigations that intensively probe the
thought processes of individuals who are presented with those
inquiries. The work provides general guidance about
questionnaire design, development, and pre-testing sequence,
with an emphasis on the cognitive interview. In particular, the
book gives detailed instructions about the use of verbal
probing techniques, and how one can elicit additional
information from subjects about their thinking and about the
manner in which they react to tested questions.
TL;DR: Cognitive interviewing as mentioned in this paper is defined as the administration of draft survey questions while collecting additional verbal information about the survey responses, which is used to evaluate the quality of the response or to help determine whether the question is generating the information that its author intends.
Abstract: Cognitive interviewing has emerged as one of the more prominent methods for identifying and correcting problems with survey questions. We define cognitive interviewing as the administration of draft survey questions while collecting additional verbal information about the survey responses, which is used to evaluate the quality of the response or to help determine whether the question is generating the information that its author intends. But beyond this general categorization, cognitive interviewing potentially includes a variety of activities that may be based on different assumptions about the type of data that are being collected and the role of the interviewer in that process. This synthesis reviews the range of current cognitive interviewing practices, focusing on three considerations: (1) what are the dominant paradigms of cognitive interviewing-what is produced under each, and what are their apparent advantages; (2) what key decisions about cognitive interview study design need to be made once the general approach is selected (e.g., who should be interviewed, how many interviews should be conducted, and how should probes be selected), and what bases exist for making these decisions; and (3) how cognitive interviewing data should be evaluated, and what standards of evidence exist for making questionnaire design decisions based on study findings. In considering these issues, we highlight where standards for best practices are not clearly defined, and suggest broad areas worthy of additional methodological research.
TL;DR: This task force report is intended to offer suggestions for good practice in planning, executing, and documenting qualitative studies that are used to support the content validity of PRO instruments to be used in medical product evaluation.