Title: Chapter Two
1Ch 6 Observing Behavior
2Places to Observe on Campus (Spring 2010)
- 1. Area in the middle of campus, by the Info
Trolley. - 2. By the food place on campus which is near the
gym/pools. - 3. By the statue of the boy overlooking the
water feature. - 4. Entrance of the SE parking structure (people
exiting structure) - 5. Entrance of the SE parking structure (people
entering structure) - 6. Entrance of the SW parking structure (people
exiting structure) - 7. Entrance of the SW parking structure (people
entering structure) - 8. By the entrance of the bookstore.
- 9 In front of C Building, by mirror pools
- 10. Shuttle stop by U Building
- 11. Bus stop on Colorado in front of library
- 12. Passenger drop off/pick up (Colorado B. in
front of L Bldg) - 13. Starbucks
3Reactivity
- Occurs when individuals change their usual
behavior, when they know they are being observed
p101 - Minimize reactivity by
- Allowing time for individuals to become used to
the presence of an observer or the recording
equipment
4Sampling Behavior p116
- Time sampling Researchers choose time intervals
for making observations - Systematic Schedule observations to occur at a
regular time - Random Use some random means for identifying
times for observations - Event sampling is used for rare events
- Situation sampling Researchers choose different
settings, circumstances, and conditions for their
observations
5Classification of Observational Methods
- Two categories of observational methods
- Observation without Intervention
- Observation with Intervention
6Observation without Intervention
- Naturalistic Observation (AKA field work or
field observations) Observation in natural
(real-world) settings without an attempt to
intervene or change the situation p110
7Participant observation
- Observer is an active participant in the natural
setting he or she observes p112-113 - Norah Vincent
- My Life as a Man
- Undisguised (unconcealed) people in the setting
know they are being observed - Disguised (concealed) people dont know they are
being observed
8Observation withoutIntervention
- Physical traces The remnants, fragments, and
products of past behavior - Products Creations, constructions, or other
artifacts of earlier behavior
9Observation without Intervention
- Physical traces Evidence that remains from the
use or nonuse of an item - natural-use traces
- controlled use traces
10Natural-use traces
- Produced without any intervention by the
investigator
11Controlled-use traces
- Produced with some degree of intervention or
manipulation by the investigator
12Natural use or controlled use trace?
13Natural use or controlled use trace?
14Natural use or controlled use trace?
15Archival records
- Public and private documents that describe the
activities of individuals, institutions,
governments, and other groups p204
16Archival Research 118-121
- A non-reactive measure (or indirect method) for
collecting datawhen the individual who did the
behavior is no longer present - Archival research involves using previously
compiled information to answer research questions -
17Running records records of specific events
- Running records are continuously kept and updated
(e.g., check book)
- Records of specific events (e.g., diploma)
18Archival data are used to
- test hypotheses as part of a multimethod approach
- test the external validity of laboratory findings
- test hypotheses about past behavior
- assess the effect of a natural treatment
19Multimethod approach
- Researchers use a variety of measures to examine
a research question
20Natural treatments
- Naturally occurring events that impact society
and individuals
21Selective deposit
- Occurs when some information is selected to be
included in the archival record, but other
information is not
22Selective survival
- Occurs when information is lost or missing from
an archival source
23Content analysis
- The process of making inferences based on
objective coding of archival data p120
24Quantitative analysis
- Classifying events and behaviors into categories
to count their frequency of occurrence p109 - Assign numerical values to responses and measures
and then subject the data to quantitative
statistical analyses
- Ex Count the number of times gender-stereotypica
l jobs were assigned to characters in the story.
25Qualitative analysis
- Subjective judgments about the content in an
archival record p109 - Describe behavior or findings based
- on themes that emerge from the data.
- Data are nonnumerical and expressed
- in language and images
- Ex Watch the tape of Osama Bin Laden and tell
me if you think he is being deceptive.
26Three Steps of Content Analysis
- Identify a relevant source
- Sample selections from the source
- Code units of analysis
27Observation with Intervention p114
- Systematic observation The careful observation
of one or more behaviors in a particular setting.
Use when - interest is in only a few very specific behaviors
- observations are quantifiable
- researcher has developed prior hypothesis
28Field experiment
- Researcher manipulates an independent variable in
a natural setting and observes behavior
(dependent variable) pp 83, 113
29Coding systems for systematic observation p115
- are either (1) developed to fit the needs of the
particular study or (2) borrowed systems
developed by others - should be as simple as possible
- must allow researchers to easily categorize
behaviors
30Coding systems can involve
- Comprehensive records of peoples behavior (e.g.,
complete records, such as video tapes)a
qualitative record - Selecting specific behaviors to recorda
quantitative record pp115-116
31Equipment Narrative Records
- Used when researchers want a complete
(comprehensive) reproduction of peoples behavior
pp 115-116 - Examples video and audio recordings, field notes
32Systematic Observation Methodological Issues
pp115-116
- Equipment can fail
- Reactivity the probability that the presence of
the observer will affect behavior - Reliability refers to how stable/consistent the
measure is over time or between observers - Sampling refers to how participants and
behaviors are chosen to be studied - Larger samples of participants and multiple
samples of behavior can increase both internal
and external validity.
33Case Studies pp117-118
- A case study provides a description of an
individual. - Usually the individual is a person, but may
also be a setting. - A psychobiography is a type of case study in
which a researcher applies psychological theory
to explain the life of an individual. -
34Case Studies
- are done when an individual possesses a
particularly rare, unusual, or noteworthy
condition. - provide unique data about some psychological
phenomenon - and the insights gained from them may lead to
other research using other methods