Definitions
Five questions readers ask first
The longitudinal-design literature uses several overlapping terms. Longitudinal design, longitudinal research design, longitudinal study design, and longitudinal study are often used as if they meant the same thing. They mostly do, with small shades of difference. The five answers below cover the five question forms that send readers to this page.
What is a longitudinal design?
A longitudinal design is a way of running research that surveys or observes the same people, organizations, or units more than once across time, and connects each unit's answers from one round to the next. Each round is called a wave. The defining feature is that the same units appear at every wave, so changes within the same unit can be measured directly rather than inferred from comparing different groups.
Cross-sectional designs, by comparison, sample different people at one moment in time. They can show how groups differ. They cannot show how individuals change. The shorthand: longitudinal designs answer "how did this person change?"; cross-sectional designs answer "how do these groups differ?"
What is the difference between a longitudinal design and a cross-sectional design?
A longitudinal design follows the same people across time. A cross-sectional design samples different people at a single point in time. The first answers questions about how individuals change. The second answers questions about how groups differ at one moment.
The operational difference is that longitudinal designs need a way to connect each person's answers across waves. Cross-sectional designs do not. That single requirement is the source of most of the practical difficulty in running longitudinal studies. Cross-sectional studies end at data collection. Longitudinal studies start their hardest work there.
For a deeper comparison including when to choose each design and what each can and cannot show, see the dedicated page on longitudinal vs cross-sectional studies.
What is a longitudinal research design?
A longitudinal research design is the formal name for the same idea, used most often in academic research methods textbooks. The phrase emphasizes that the design is being chosen at the research-planning stage to answer a specific kind of research question, namely a question about change within a unit over time.
Longitudinal research designs come in four main types: panel designs (the same individuals at every wave), cohort designs (a group sharing a starting point), trend designs (different individuals from the same population at each wave), and retrospective designs (current participants asked about past time points). Each type fits a different research question and carries different operational requirements.
Longitudinal design in psychology
In psychology, a longitudinal design is a research design that follows the same participants across months or years to measure how their behavior, cognition, or development changes over time. Classic examples include studies of language acquisition in children, twin studies that track personality stability, and Alzheimer's research that follows the same older adults through annual cognitive assessments.
Psychology textbooks usually distinguish longitudinal designs from cross-sectional designs and from cross-sequential designs. The cross-sequential design combines the two: several cohorts followed longitudinally, so age effects and cohort effects can be separated. For most undergraduate methods coursework, the simple definition holds: longitudinal means same people, more than once, across time.
Longitudinal design meaning
The word longitudinal comes from "longitude," meaning length. In research, a longitudinal design is one that has length in time: the study is stretched across multiple time points rather than compressed into one. Saying a study is longitudinal does not commit you to a length, only to the structure. A two-wave study six weeks apart can be longitudinal. A five-wave study across thirty years can also be longitudinal.
What makes the structure work is the connection between waves. Two surveys six weeks apart with no way to match the same person's answers between them is not a longitudinal study; it is two cross-sectional studies. Length without connection is not longitudinal data.
Types of longitudinal design
Four common types, four different jobs
These four types are sometimes treated as alternatives and sometimes combined inside one study. The right type depends on the research question and on what data is realistic to collect.
Panel design
Same individuals, every wave
The same people are surveyed at every wave. Each person's answers are connected across waves through a tracking ID. Panel designs are the strongest form of longitudinal design for measuring within-person change. They are also the most demanding to run because attrition compounds across waves. Used most when the research question is about how individuals change.
Cohort design
Group sharing a starting point
A group defined by a shared start, such as students who entered school in the same year or program participants who joined in the same quarter, is followed across time. Cohort designs can survey the entire cohort at every wave (panel-style) or sample different cohort members at different waves (rolling-style). The shared starting point is what defines the cohort.
Trend design
Different individuals, same population
Different individuals are sampled from the same population at each wave. The questions are consistent across waves but the people are different. Trend designs can show how the population is changing but cannot show how individuals are changing. Used when individual-level change is not the question or when tracking the same people is not feasible.
Retrospective vs prospective
Looking back vs forward in time
A prospective longitudinal design plans the waves at the start and collects data forward in time. A retrospective design asks current participants about past time points. Prospective designs are more accurate because they collect data at the time it happens. Retrospective designs are cheaper and faster but more prone to recall error.