“…Several questionnaires have been adapted to online forms and data has been flowing steadily from these tools. The psychometric quality of data gathered on the internet, by means of online questionnaires, has been extensively scrutinized and several studies have tried to understand how the internet may affect the validity and the reliability of different questionnaires and psychometric scales (Bates & Cox, 2008;Bressani & Downs, 2002;Buchanan et al, 2005;Carlbring et al, 2007;Fish, McGuire, Hogan, Morrison, & Stewart, 2010;Hedman et al, 2010;Herrero & Meneses, 2006;Hewson & Charlton, 2005;Im et al, 2005;Luce et al, 2007;McCabe, Boyd, Young, Crawford, & Pope, 2005;Meyerson & Tryon, 2003;Miller et al, 2002;Naus, Philipp, & Samsi, 2009;Riva, Teruzzi, & Anolli, 2003;Suris, Borman, Lind, & Kashner, 2007). Some of the advantages of the internet data collection, when compared to the traditional paper-and-pencil selfreport, mail and telephone surveys, include a lower cost, a larger sampling frame which may include geographically distant areas, respondent commodity, absence of interviewer biased responses, easy database creation, reduced data typos and commodity of data analysis.…”