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Final Study Guide Research Design

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Give treatment to participants and observe if it causes changes in behavior ... Representativeness = Resemblance to the population characteristics ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Final Study Guide Research Design


1
Final Study GuideResearch Design
2
Experimental Research
3
Experimental Research
  • Researchers manipulate independent variable - 2
    levels
  • And measure the other (dependent variable)
  • Give treatment to participants and observe if it
    causes changes in behavior
  • Compare experimental group (w/ treatment) with a
    control group (no treatment)
  • Can say IV caused change in the DV

4
Independent Variable
  • The variable whose impact you want to know
  • Stimulus Input Variable
  • The variable you manipulate in experimental
    research

5
Dependent Variable
  • The variable whose changes you want to know
  • You measure it
  • Outcome Response variable

6
  • Random Selection
  • A way to choose your sample of study
  • Any member of population has equal chance of
    being selected
  • Random Assignment
  • A way to assign participants in sample to the
    various treatment conditions (groups will receive
    different level of IV)
  • Any member of your sample has equal chance of
    being assigned in any treatment group

7
Internal Validity
  • Ability of your research design to adequately
    test your hypothesis
  • Showing that variation in I.V. CAUSED the
    variation in the D.V. in experiment
  • In correlational study,
  • Showing that changes in value of criterion
    variable relate solely to changes in value of
    predictor variable

8
Confounding
  • Whenever 2 or more variables combine in a way
    that their effects cannot be separated
    confounding.
  • Thus, the teaching method study as designed lacks
    internal validity.
  • You dont know if the change in the DV is from
    the IV or from confounding variable

9
Quasi-experimental research
  • Naturally occurring conditions
  • (IV change)
  • No control over variables influencing behavior
    (confounding variables)
  • Another variable that changed along with the
    variable of interest may have caused the observed
    effect
  • (NO random assignment)

10
Non-Experimental Research
11
Non-experimental Correlational research
  • Determine whether 2 or more variables are
    associated,
  • If so, to establish direction and strength of
    relationships
  • Observe variables as they are,
  • cant manipulate them

12
Research design
  • Manipulate IV
    Random Assignment
  • Experimental (Causal) x x
  • Quasi-experimental x
  • Non-experimental /
  • Correlational
  • Predictive
  • Descriptive

13
  • Causal - (Experimental)
  • one variable directly or indirectly influences
    another.
  • Correlational - (Non-experimental)
  • Changes in one variable accompany changes in
    another.
  • A relationship exists. Dont know if either
    variable actually influences the other.

14
TERMS
  • Population
  • Universe/entire set of people you want to draw
    conclusions about
  • Sample
  • Subset of the population
  • People actually in your study
  • Sampling error
  • Differences between sample population

15
Sampling
  • Drawing a subgroup from a population (vs. Census)

16
Probability vs. Non-probability
Probability Sampling
Non-probability Sampling
  • Simple random
  • Systematic random
  • Stratified random
  • Cluster
  • Convenience
  • Snowball
  • Quota
  • Purposive

Population info Available
Population info Not available
17
Representativenss Generalizability
  • Representativeness Resemblance to the
    population characteristics
  • Generalizability An ability to generalize the
    results of your study to the whole population
  • High representativeness High generalizability
  • Probability sampling allows higher
    representativeness than non-probability

18
External Validity
  • Degree that results can be extended beyond the
    limited research setting
  • Generalizable
  • Based on sample ( rats, college students, whites,
    males, lab setting)

19
Non-Probability Sampling
20
Convenience Sampling
  • Get available people in the population
  • Low representativeness / generalizability

21
Quota Sampling
  • Predetermine the proportion of groups in the
    sample (e.g., male 50, female 50)

22
Conceptualization Operationalization
Idea
Clarification
Conceptualization
Operationalization
23
Operationalization
  • From complex variable to series of simpler
    variables
  • Redefining a variable in terms of steps to
    measure
  • Conceptual definition ? Operational definition
  • What the researcher must do to MEASURE it

24
Types of Measurement Validity
Empirical (Criterion-related)
Judgmental
  • Face validity
  • Content validity
  • Predictive
  • Concurrent
  • Convergent
  • Discriminant

25
O T E rule
Observed score True score Eerror
Observed measured score, result True true,
actual, exact state Error measurement error
26
Reliability of a Measure
  • Degree to which a measure (score, observation) is
    affected by error
  • A reliable measure has little or no error

27
Types of Reliability
  • Interobserver (interrater) reliability
  • Test-Retest reliability
  • Parallel-forms reliability
  • Split- half

28
Inter-rater Agreement
  • Consistency between measurements by two or more
    observers
  • Different observers watch the same sample of
    behavior
  • Compute proportion of time both observers
    recorded the same behavior as happening

agreements agreements
disagreements ( of observations)
  • Training needed for observers

29
Increasing reliability
  • Increase number of items on your questionnaire
    (no 1 or 2 item measures)
  • Write clear, well-written items on survey
  • Standardize administration procedures
  • Treat all participants alike
  • Timing, procedures, instructions alike
  • Score survey carefully -- avoid errors

30
Valid and Reliable
  • A good measurement
  • Measures what it should measure in a consistent
    way

31
Reliable but Invalid
  • Your measurement is consistent, but not measuring
    what it is supposed to measure

32
Research Report Structure
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Method
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Reference
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