Hi there,
I am using version 2.50 and have a complex survey that I need help with if anyone has the time please.... In one part of the survey I need participants to be randomised to one of four sets of 18 questions but I would also like to enable participants to save and return to the survey if they get interrupted (it takes about 20 minutes to complete).
To set up the randomisation I have made each of the 18 questions a separate group - so question group 1 includes questions 1a, 1b, 1c and 1d, question group 2 includes questions 2a, 2b, 2c and 2d etc. I then inserted a hidden question prior to this section, with an automatic randomisation to one of four groups using the formula 'rand(1,4)'. I then set a relevance equation (eg '((random==1))', '((random==2))' etc) for each question in each group so that only questions 1a, 2a, 3a, 4a etc were displayed to those participants randomised to group 1, and only questions 1b, 2b, 3b, 4b etc were displayed to those particiapants randomised to group 2, and so on.
The strategy I used was as described in this helpful blog:
www.ryananddebi.com/2015/04/09/limesurve...xperimental-designs/
I know that when using the 'resume later' / 'save and return' feature this undoes any randomisation because the randomisation is generated afresh each time you log on. However, I am wondering if tokens can overcome this? ie when a participant is allocated a token, does that 'freeze' the particular survey generated for them so when they log in at a later time they will still be allocated to the same randomisation stream and be able to pick up with the same set of questions at the same point where they logged out earlier?
To make things even more complicated, I would like to randomise the order in which the question blocks are displayed, ie this would mean someone allocated to group 3 in my hidden question would see questions appear in random order 7c, 10c, 1c, 18c, 3c, 8c... rather than 1c, 2c, 3c, 4c, 5c, 6c... etc. However, if this complicates things too much, it is optional! The most important thing is that participants are randomly allocated to one of the four sets of questions and that ideally they can save and return to the same set of questions.
Thanks so much for your time!
Beth