Generalized Trust in Surveys: From Scales to Dragons
Abstract
Generalized trust has been one of the frequently researched attitudes in political and
social sciences. Although this type of trust saw its real breakthrough in the theories about
social capital, offered by Robert D. Putnam in 1993, the survey measurement was created
in the 1940s. Despite this, only a handful of studies evaluate generalized trust from a
survey measurement perspective.
This thesis presents four articles aiming to rectify this shortcoming by employing a
measurement error perspective to the generalized trust survey question. The first article
offers analyses of whether the survey question can be improved through the application of
theories dominant in survey methodology. The second article investigates measurement
error in generalized trust and other attitudes stemming from panel survey participation.
The third article analyzes whether measurement error in responses to factual questions
bias results between generalized trust and ethnic diversity. The fourth article utilizes the
knowledge obtained in the thesis by studying social experiences in an online game and its
impact on generalized trust.
The thesis proposes that measurement error in the generalized trust survey
measurement can be substantially decreased by employing survey methodology theories.
In addition, generalized trust seems to be measured in panels without increasing
measurement error. Furthermore, the effect of ethnic diversity does not seem to be driven
by measurement error in factual survey questions about immigrants. Using the proposed
adaption of how to measure the generalized trust survey question in the first articles, the
last article finds that social experiences in voluntary associational-like environments in an
online game seem to affect generalized trust. All in all, when measured as suggested in
this thesis, generalized trust fares pretty well as a survey measurement. Hence, the thesis
promotes a continued usage of the generalized trust survey question.
Parts of work
I. Lundmark, Sebastian, Mikael Gilljam, and Stefan Dahlberg.
2015. “Measuring Generalized Trust: An Examination of Question
Wording and the Number of Scale Points.” Public Opinion
Quarterly. ::doi::10.1093/poq/nfv042 II. Lundmark Sebastian and Mikael Gilljam. 2015. “Panel
Conditioning on Political and Social Attitudes: Evidence from a
Seven-Wave Randomized Experiment.” Paper presented at the
American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) 70th
Annual Conference 2015, Hollywood, FL, USA. III. Lundmark, Sebastian and Andrej Kokkonen. 2014. “Subjective
Assessment and Objective Number of Immigrants: Impact on
Generalized Trust and Attitudes toward Immigrants.” Paper
presented at the American Political Science Association (APSA)
111th Annual Meeting, Washington, DC, USA. IV. Lundmark, Sebastian. 2015. “Gaming Together: When an
imaginary world affects generalized trust.” Journal of Information
Technology & Politics 12 (1): pp. 54–73. ::doi::10.1080/19331681.2014.972602
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
Institution
Department of Political Science ; Statsvetenskapliga institutionen
Disputation
kl. 13.15, Torgny Segerstedtssalen, Universitetets huvudbyggnad, Vasaparken 1, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2016-01-29
sebastian.lundmark@gu.se
View/ Open
Date
2015-12-21Author
Lundmark, Sebastian
Keywords
Generalized Trust
Survey Methodology
Survey Experiments
Panel Studies
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-9682-9
978-91-628-9683-6
ISSN
0346-5942
Series/Report no.
Göteborg Studies in Politics
145
Language
eng