What are your thoughts on the ecological validity of Internet research? Specifically, given the de-individuation and self-presentation bias (e.g., via one's avatar) that can occur on the Internet, would you expect a sample of Internet participants' responses on attitude and behavioral intent measures to reflect the attitudes and intentions of a non-Internet sample? Would you expect Internet responses to differ based on where you recruited participants? For example, would you expect ecological validity to be greatest for a sample recruited from Second Life, Amazon's crowdsourcing website Mechanical Turk, or Facebook? Are all Internet sources created equal when it comes to recruiting participants - why or why not? If we consider the Internet a type of "field setting," is it possible to collect indirect or unobtrusive measures in an Internet sample - what would be an example?
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