Title: 1. Introduction to Research
1Research Methods (Overview)
- 1. Introduction to Research
- 2. Social Sciences
- 3. Types of Research
- 4. Motives for Social Research
2Announcement
- Leading anti-sexist male activist Jackson Katz is
coming to WSU on January 27 at 7 p.m. to give a
male perspective on violence against women, and
what men can do to stop it.Location Katz will
speak to WSU and the Pullman community from 7
p.m. to 8 p.m. in the Compton Union Buildings
auditorium.
3Instructor
- Name Dr. Arina Gertseva
- Office Wilson-Short, room 146
- Office Hours M W 800 -1100 a.m.
- E-mail garina_at_wsu.edu
4Teaching Assistant
- Teaching Assistant Joseph King
- Office Wilson-Short Hall 214
- Office Hours by appointment
- Phone 335-4595 (messages only)
- Email joseph_king_at_wsu.edu
5Course Website
- http//cooley.libarts.wsu.edu/garina/soc320/
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11Assignment 1
- Photos/images are symbolic statements that tell a
lot about the person - Create a photo essay about who you are
- Study the photo essays created by your classmates
- Analyze these exhibits to answer the question
How do WSU students see themselves?
12Assignment 1
- Note both style and content
- Look for the what, and deduce the why
- Think comparatively
- Develop general categories(e.g., things related
to school, family, leisure) - Note any differences by gender
13Assignment 1 Example
14Research
- Research is an organized and systematic way of
finding answers to questions
15Research is .
- SYSTEMATIC because there is a definite set of
procedures and steps which you will follow - ORGANIZED in that there is a structure or method
in going about doing research. It is a planned
procedure, not a spontaneous one. - FINDING ANSWERS is the end of all research.
Research is successful when we find answers.
Sometimes the answer is no, but it is still an
answer. - QUESTIONS Without a question, research has no
focus, drive, or purpose.
16Questions are everywhere
- How are you?
- How was the party?
- Do you want to have a cup of coffee?
17Questions are everywhere
- Why people lie and how to tell if they do?
- Why do people cheat?
18Explaining human behavior
- How do people fall in love?
- Compatibility? Attractiveness? Difference?
19Untested explanations
- Unfounded, but commonly accepted, explanations
for behavior can have widespread consequences - To avoid the trap of easy and untested
explanations, we need to adopt an
approach-scientific explanation
20Social Sciences
- The social sciences are a group of academic
disciplines that study human aspects of the world
21List of social sciences (not all)
- Anthropology
- Communication
- Cultural studies
- Economics
- Education
- Geography
- History
- International Relations
- Linguistics
- Political science
- Psychology
- Social policy
- Social work
- Sociology
- Development studies
22Methods
- Experiment
- Survey
- Observation
- Interview
- Unobtrusive Method
23Other Methods Mike Adams
24Mystery Meat MacrophotographyA News Target
Photo Tour by Mike Adams
25This is a 1x magnification shot of a stack of
salami slices. You can clearly see some of the
texture, the fat blobs and some dark spices that
appear to be spices
263x magnification of some huge black chunk of
something. Note that the ingredients list of this
product lists no pepper!
27Mystery Meat Macrophotography
28Here's a 1x cross-section photo of a Jimmy Dean
pork sausage
29Here's a 4x magnification showing some of the
beef collagen casing (that's the stuff that looks
like rice paper). That's made from interesting
beef parts
30Why to do research?
31Beyond Academia
- Since the late 1970s, many social scientists
have tried to make the discipline useful for
non-academic purposes - The results of sociological research aid
educators, lawmakers, administrators, developers,
and others interested in resolving social
problems and formulating public policy
32Science and Research
- We are surrounded by research
- We use social research to raise children, reduce
crime, improve public health, sell products, or
just understand ones life - Reports of research appear on broadcast news
programs, in magazines, and in newspapers
33People change their behavior, they
- Abandoned electric blankets (increase in cancer
in children whose mothers had used electric
blankets while pregnant) - Moved their chairs away from televisions
(radioactivity) - Take aspirin a day to avoid strokes
- Quit smoking to avoid cancer
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35Weight loss boom
36Advertising
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38Weight loss drug- Wonder Pill
- European health agencies have warned that the
weight-loss drug rimonabant -- marketed as
Acomplia, may cause dangerous psychological side
effects in 10 percent of users , including
suicidal thoughts
39Side effects no one is talking about
- Rimonabant acts to suppress appetite by blocking
receptors in the brain that regulate food intake
and help break down sugars and fats - Evidence suggests that 10 percent of Acomplia
users develop psychological side effects, the
most common being depression - Other potential side effects include anxiety,
irritability, nervousness and sleep disorders - Approximately one percent of users experience
suicidal thoughts while taking the drug
40- Crossen Cynthia Tainted Truth The Manipulation
of Fact in America. New York Touchstone, 1994
41Research and food
- Research about food contributed many truths to
the world (some of them contradict the others) - There is little agreement about how coffee, oat
bran, margarine, wine, and nuts affect human
bodies
42Coffee
- Risks
- Anxiety and sleep changes
- Constipation
- Cosmetic
- Blood pressure
- Effects on pregnancy and menopause
- Coronary artery disease
- Benefits
- Reduced risk of Alzheimer's disease
- Reduced risk of gallstone disease
- Reduced risk of Parkinson's disease
- Cognitive performance
- Analgesic enhancement
- Antineoplastic
- Cardioprotective
- Laxative/diuretic
- Antioxidant
43Research and food
- There is truth about food so sacred that it
cannot be challenged by research - Consider some surprises of recent years
- Milk is the number one health hazard facing
young children , wrote a Santa Rosa, California
doctor in support of a new report by the
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine - The report cited a study published in the New
England Journal of Medicine about milk
contributing to juvenile diabetes
44Diabetes?
- Despite its neutral name , the committee is
actually a pressure group of mostly vegetarians
who oppose animal research and support animal
welfare groups
45Motives for Social Research
- Policy Motivations
- Academic Motivations
- Personal Motivations
46Policy Motivation
- Specific problem/issue is addressed
- Student government wants to know whether the
number of students who are arrested for driving
while intoxicated will decline if university
sponsors alcohol-free parties next year
47Academic Motivation
- Provide foundation for knowledge about the world
without visible practical meaning - Todays computers could not exist without
research in abstract mathematics conducted over a
century ago - Why do people conform to social norms?
48Personal Motivation
- Shy people might study how to be more comfortable
with strangers - International researchers might be interested in
cultural adjustment to the host culture - Previous trauma can be a motive for future
research in psychology
49Example explain the behavior of Kittys
Neighbors (1964)
- Kitty Genovese New York woman who was stabbed
to death over a period of about 40 minutes - During the attack, over 30 of her neighbors
listened to her screams, yet no one of them
bothered to call the police - Urban Apathy phenomenon
50Types of research
- Pure research
- for the sake of scientific knowledge
- Construction of theories of models that allow for
a better understanding of human behavior - No immediate direct impact
- Applied research
- Practical goal in mind
- Development of strategies intended to address the
problem
51Which research is more useful?
- Some scholars/policy makers consider pure
research to be waste of time and money - Since the late 1980s, many social scientists
have tried to make the discipline useful for
non-academic purposes - The results of sociological research aid
educators, lawmakers, administrators, developers,
and others interested in resolving social
problems and formulating public policy
52Which topic is more important?
- American Time Use Survey (ATUS) Series - collects
information on the kinds of activities people
engage in and the time they spend involved in
these activities by age, sex, educational
attainment, labor force status, and other
characteristics, as well as by weekday and
weekend day.
53Which topic is more important?
- Impact of the Court Process on Sexually Abused
Children in North Carolina, 1983-1986Â - examines
how sexual abuse and the subsequent judicial
processes affect the mental health functioning of
child victims by assessing the impact of (1)
additional harm to victims from out-of-home
placement, (2) criminal prosecution of the
offender/family member, (3) subject testimony in
juvenile or criminal court, and (4) family and
professional support for the children.