Observations Flashcards

1
Q

What are unstructured observations?

A
  • the observer records everything that happens which is useful for getting an impression and then developing specific behavioural categories
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2
Q

What are structured observations?

A
  • the observer has a specific idea of what they want to look for, they do this by:
    1 > determining the behaviours to be observed and creating behavioural categories
    2 > determining the sampling method to be used
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3
Q

What’s a behavioural category and what are the strengths of it?

A

A target behaviour is broken up into components that are observable and measurable
- increases inter-rater reliability
- increases validity

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4
Q

Describe an example of a behavioural category

A

Aggression on a playground can be divided into:
- punching
- kicking
- swearing

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5
Q

What are the different sampling methods?

A
  • Time
  • Event
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6
Q

Describe and evaluate time sampling

A

-Observe and record behaviour at regular time intervals (e.g. every minute)
+ reduces the number of observations made
- the sample of behaviour may be unrepresentative as some behaviour may be missed

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7
Q

Describe and evaluate event sampling

A
  • the researcher makes a tally every time a behaviour occurs
    + useful for infrequent behaviours
  • if its a complex event, important details may be overlooked
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8
Q

Describe the conditions that structured observations can be

A
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9
Q

Describe the difference between naturalistic and controlled settings for external validity, replication and extraneous variables

A
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10
Q

Define correlations

A

The process of establishing a relationship or connection (and its strength) between 2 or more co-variables

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11
Q

Define and evaluate coefficients

A
  • A number between -1 and 1 which gets stronger the closer it gets to 1
    + they’re useful for studying potentially unethical topics
  • it can’t establish cause and effect
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