Research Methods Continued Flashcards

1
Q

What is reliability?

A

Reliability is the measure of consistency - getting the same results each time

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2
Q

What is test-retest reliability?

A

Test-retest reliability is the same person/group undertaking the research measure - potential demand characteristics- time has to be taken into account between testing

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3
Q

Understanding test-retest results

A

Test-retest results-> scores correlated after measure has been taken on two occasions - significant = high reliability (+0.8-1)

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4
Q

Inter-observer reliability

A

Inter-observer reliability = extent to which two observers are observing and recording behaviours in a consistent way -> useful in ensuring reliability

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5
Q

Inter-observer reliability and behavioural categories

A

Inter-observer reliability - used in measuring behavioural categories - inter-observer reliability ensures categories correct - as psychologist observe same situation together or seperately -scores are then correlated

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6
Q

Improving reliability and questionnaires

A

Can identify questions that has the biggest impact on reliability

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7
Q

Improving reliability and interviews

A

Adjusting interviews:
-same interviewer (creates researcher bias)
-training interviewers - eg the way questions are asked, how open they are

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8
Q

Improving reliability and experiments

A

Experiments:
-level of control researcher has over variables
-lab = high reliability = control over IV - standardised procedures
-control over extraneous variables

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9
Q

Improving reliability and observations

A

Observations:
Can look objectively- relies on observer interpretation
Operationalise behavioural categories (clear and specific)

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10
Q

Difference between related and unrelated designs in psychology

A

Related designs = designs such as repeated measures and matched pairs where there are connections
Unrelated designs = designs such as independant groups where there is no connection between people in each group

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11
Q

What are the 3 levels of data?

A

The three levels of data are norminal, odinal and interval

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12
Q

What is meant by nominal data?

A

Norminal data refers to categorical data -> numbers referring to people in categories -> discrete data as each part appears in only one category
+ = Easily generated from closed questions
- = lacks depth

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13
Q

What is meant by ordinal data?

A

Data ordered in some way - used to rank data on a numerical scale from high to low
+ = More detail than nominal
- = intervals not equal value so cannot use a mean

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14
Q

What is meant by interval data?

A

Interval data: data on a numerical scale with units of equal size eg temp, objective
->Ratio data = type of interval data = fixed 0 = cannot have negative - eg weight and height
+ = more informative and reliable
- = can be arbitrary

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15
Q

Considerations that researchers have to take into account when deciding on an appropiate statistical test

A

Considerations that researchers have to take into account when deciding on an appropriate statistical test:
-Wether you are investigating a difference (one control and one experimental condition) or a relationship (of two co-variables)
-Experimental design (when looking for a difference

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16
Q

Statistical tests used for nominal data (for related or unrelated)

A

Nominal data:
Test of difference for related designs = Simon Sign Test
Test of difference for unrelated designs = Cowell Chi-Squared

17
Q

Stastical tests used for ordinal data (for related or unrelated

A

Ordinal data:
Test of difference for related designs = Wilcoxon (Wants)
Test of difference for unrelated designs = More Mann-Whitney Test
Test of association for ordinal data = Singers Spearman Rho

18
Q

Stastical tests for interval data

A

Interval data:
-Test of difference for related designs = Related T-test (parametric, receiving)
-Test of difference for unrelated designs = Unrelated T-test (parametric, unanimous)
-Test of association = Pearson’s R (parametric, praise)

19
Q

3 Parametric assumptions that have to be applied to use statistical tests

A

3 Parametric assumptions that have to be applied to use statistical tests:
-Data should be interval
-Data should be drawn from normally distributed population (inverted U)
-Should be homogeneity of variance between conditions (the deviation of scores is similar between conditions)

20
Q

What is the sign test?

A

The sign test is used when looking for a difference between paired data ie repeated measures or matched pairs - generates nominal data

21
Q

How to carry out the sign test

A

How to carry out the sign test:
-Each pair of data scored with either + or - (if there is no difference = 0)m
-Value of S is calculated (adding total + and - and selecting smallest value)
-Calculate N value (total - nil scores)
-Use against critical value to determine significance (equal or less to be significant)

22
Q

Chi-squared test

A

Chi-squared test = Test of either difference or association - used on nominal, unrelated data

23
Q

How to carry out the chi-squared test

A

Chi-squared test:
-Frequencies recorded and put into contingency table
-Degrees of freedom calculatred before determining significance of data ( df = ((rows-1))x((columns-1)) )
-To be significant = results equal or more than critical

24
Q

Calculating degree of freedom for chi-squared test

A

Calculating degree of freedom for chi-squared test:
df = (rows-1) x (columns-1)

25
Q
A
26
Q

What three things should science have?

A

Science should have:
-Assumptions (paradigm - shared set of collective assumptions
-Scientific methods (empiricism)
-Terminology

27
Q

What was peppers idea on science?

A

Peppers idea = falsification - if it is false, then this can be shown by observation or experiment - cant be fully proven right but can be proven wrong - no theory in science final

28
Q

What is predictive power?

A

Predictive power is theories should take nomothetic approach (general laws should be applied)

29
Q

What is empiricism?

A

Empiricism - Locke - gathering information through observation/experiments rather than reasoned argument/opinion

30
Q

Types of internal validity?

A

Types of internal data:
Face validity - does it look like what is should be measuring
Concurrent validity - comparing to established test
Construct - using specific group with predictable results
Predictive - can performance be used to predict future behaviour

31
Q

Types of external validity

A

Types of external validity:
Ecological - reflective of everyday behaviour
Temporal - reflective of time periods
Population - reflective of target populations

32
Q

What is standard deviation?

A

Standard deviation is a measure to show to what extent the values in data deviate around the mean

33
Q

What is counterbalancing?

A

Counterbalancing is a technique used to deal with order effects when using a repeated mesures design - splitting up sample

34
Q

Designing experiments in psychology

A

Designing experiments in psychology:
-Self-report methods (interviews, questionnaires) (open/closed)
-Experimental design (RM, IM, MP)
-Procedure (sample size, type of sampling)
-Consent from participants