Lisa Peeters
PhD student at the Methodology of Educational Sciences Research Group @ KU Leuven | Researching experience sampling methodology & encouraging scared students in statistics courses
- Reposted by Lisa PeetersWhat a week! After 5 days, the #mitnb workshop has come to an end. We had a keynote on time scales and two workshops on careless responding and reliability. The central part of the workshops were the hackathons. We had super diverse hackathons, all designed to assess measurement in #ESM. (1/4)
- Reposted by Lisa Peeters1st day of #MITNB meeting at @tesc-tilburgu.bsky.social. Excited for the week ahead, where we'll tackle measurement issues in #ESM, e.g. modeling processes across timescales, building a formal theory on measurement, and evaluating statistical assumptions in #ESM data. Go teamwork <3
- Reposted by Lisa PeetersAre you an ESM item measuring the quality of social experiences looking for validation? 👀 Because if you are, I've got some bad news for you. Our new preprint is out: osf.io/preprints/ps... @gudruneisele.bsky.social @ginettelafit.bsky.social @lisapeeters.bsky.social @oliviajkirtley.bsky.social
- The first preprint of my PhD is out! Our review maps choices that researchers make throughout an ESM study from start to finish, including reporting and open science practices. We compare our findings to previous literature where possible, but also provide novel insights! osf.io/preprints/ps...
- This project also made it clear to me that systematic reviews are very well-suited for a registered report. Registered reports are not only for empirical, quantitative research with statistically testable hypotheses!
- A big thank you to everyone who was involved in this project, Wim Van Den Noortgate, Annelise Blanchard, Marie Suenaert, @gudruneisele.bsky.social, @oliviajkirtley.bsky.social, Richard Artner and @ginettelafit.bsky.social! <3
- Reposted by Lisa PeetersNew preprint! Does data quality drop when participants respond to #EMA / #ESM surveys in the presence of others? We explored this in a pooled analysis of 4 ESM studies and found (subtle) shifts in burden & response behavior depending on participants’ social context: doi.org/10.31234/osf...