Chapter 6 - Surveys and Observations Flashcards

1
Q

define survey/poll

A

method of posing questions to people via telephone, personal interviews or written questinaires

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2
Q

define open-ended and forced-choice questions

A

open-ended: allow the responder to answer in any way that they would like too

forced-choice: the responder must show their opinion by picking the best of two or more options

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3
Q

define the likert scale

A

a survey question format using a rating scale containing multiple response options anchored by terms with strongly agree, disagree, etc.

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4
Q

define semantic differential format

A

a survey question format using a response scale whose numbers are anchored with contrasting adjectives. similiare to likert scale but just using different describing words rather than strongly agree.

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5
Q

define leading questions

A

these are problematic because its wording encourages one response more than the others, therefore tweaking its construct validity

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6
Q

define a double-barreled question

A

these are problematic because it asks two questions in one, weakening its construct validity

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7
Q

define negatively worded questions

A

these contain negatively phrased statements, making its wording complicated or confusing and potentially tweaking its construct validity

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8
Q

define response set

A

a shortcut respondents may use to answer items in a long survey, rather than responding to the content of each item.

also known as nondifferentiation

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9
Q

define acquiescence

A

answering yes or strongly agree to every item in a survey/interview. also known as yea-saying

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10
Q

define fence-sitting

A

playing it safe by answering in the middle of the scale for every question in a survey

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11
Q

define the faking good and faking bad phenomenons

A

faking good: giving answers on a survey that make one look better than one really is

faking bad: giving answers on a survey that make one look worse than one really is

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12
Q

define observer bias

A

a bias that occurs when observer expectations influence the interpretation of participants’ behaviours or outcomes of the study.

behaviour is rated according to their own expectations/hypothesis

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13
Q

define observer effects

A

a change in the behaviour of study participants in the direction of observers’ expectations. also known as the expectancy effect

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14
Q

define masked/blind design

A

a study in which the observers are unaware of the experimental conditions to which participants have been assigned

DOUBLE BLIND

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15
Q

define reactivity

A

a change in the behaviour of participants because they are aware they are being watched

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16
Q

define unobtrusive observation

A

made indirectly, through physical traces of behaviour, or made by someone who is hidden or is posing as a bystander

17
Q

can observers be biases in observation research?

A

yes they may be.

to reduce:
- clearly operationalize variables to know how to observe
- have a clear coding scheme
- have multiple observers (inter-tester reliability)

18
Q

can participants be biases in observation research?

A

yes they may be. they might just want to help out the research to confirm their hypothesis and just be a good participant

to reduce:
have blind study, use deception

19
Q

what type of reliabilty is best used for observations

A

inter-rater

20
Q

what are teh two things we look at too see if a measure is good?>

A

the reliability and validity (does it measure when they truly want to)

21
Q

define construct validity

A

how well the researchers measured the variables

22
Q

what are the different kinds of formats you can have for surveys?

A

open end: can provide more detailed data, and can help to explore a topic to learn about the common response. but people might not even asmwer the question. more about learning about topic

forced choice: is super easy to analyse and is more efficient. but it cannot fully describe how someone is feeling, its very general. more about quantifying data

23
Q

what is important about the questions themselves?

A

wording!

BRUSO
Brief - not too long
Relevant
Unambiguous - not open to more interpretation
Specific
Objective

24
Q

important elements about the wording of a question

A
  • avoid leading question (to impose what the right response is)
  • avoid baised language, be neutral
  • ask multiple question sin different ways to get consistent data
  • avoid double-barreled question (asking 2 in 1)
  • avoud double negative (using negative words to be confusing)
  • see if the order of questions has an impact or not (early question can influence response to later ones)
25
Q

what are the ways in which people response to self-report measure?

A

non-differentiation: dont really read all the questions, just answer yes or no (reverse coding)

fence sitting: just play it safe and stay in the neutral positive the whole time (remove middle option)

social desirability: just wanting to look good (results stay annoymus)

some info is just hard to know about yourself: self-bias

relying on memories of past events: low accuracy for salient(most important) event, always reconstructing

26
Q

what is the conscientiuos responder scale

A

this si when you put in question to make sure people are really reading.

choset the first option for this question

27
Q

what are indirect measures of people submitting carelss responses?

A

response time: long time means that they are less focused
consistency indice: when does calculation, look at the consistency between questions of same construct