Conjoint Glossary

ACA (Adaptive Conjoint Analysis)

A conjoint analysis technique developed by Rich Johnson in the 1980s. It customizes the interview process for each respondent and is particularly suited for situations with more attributes than can feasibly be handled with traditional conjoint analysis (TCA). ACA focuses on the attributes most relevant to the respondent, reducing cognitive overload by presenting only a few attributes at a time.

ACBC (Adaptive Choice-Based Conjoint)

A proprietary multistage approach from Sawtooth Software that integrates a “Build Your Own” section, a binary choice component, and a choice tournament into a conjoint analysis model. This method adapts the questions according to the respondent’s previous answers in order to gather more detailed and meaningful information during the interview than traditional choice-based conjoint (CBC).