4.4 Editorial Material

Food for thought: Commentary on Burnette et al. (2021) Concerns and recommendations for using Amazon MTurk for eating disorder research COMMENT

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EATING DISORDERS
Volume 55, Issue 2, Pages 282-284

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eat.23671

Keywords

data quality; Mechanical Turk; online recruitment platform; online research; open science; survey research

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Burnette et al. aimed to validate eating disorder symptom measures among transgender adults using MTurk, but faced data quality issues. Their concerns about MTurk use in psychological research are overstated due to the limitations of their single study. In this commentary, we outline key screening procedures for obtaining quality MTurk data.
Burnette et al. aimed to validate two eating disorder symptom measures among transgender adults recruited from Mechanical Turk (MTurk). After identifying several data quality issues, Burnette et al. abandoned this aim and instead documented the issues they faced (e.g., demographic misrepresentation, repeat submissions, inconsistent responses across similar questions, failed attention checks). Consequently, Burnette et al. raised concerns about the use of MTurk for psychological research, particularly in an eating disorder context. However, we believe these claims are overstated because they arise from a single study not designed to test MTurk data quality. Further, despite claiming to go above and beyond current recommendations, Burnette et al. missed key screening procedures. In particular, they missed procedures known to prevent participants who use commercial data centers (i.e., server farms) to hide their true IP address and complete multiple surveys for financial gain. In this commentary, we outline key screening procedures that allow researchers to obtain quality MTurk data. We also highlight the importance of balancing efforts to increase data quality with efforts to maintain sample diversity. With appropriate screening procedures, which should be preregistered, MTurk remains a viable participant source that requires further validation in an eating disorder context.

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