Ecological validity (Practical issues) Flashcards

1
Q

What are ‘practical issues’?

A

The methodological choices researchers make when designing their research

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2
Q

What are the 3 practical issues in order of importance?

A

Type of experiment - lab or field
Supported by: Raine and Skinner

Sampling technique
Supported by: Milgram, Baddeley, and stratified sampling

Type of data - quantitative or qualitative
Supported by: Case studies like HM

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3
Q

Why do researchers have to think about the type of experiment? (2 points)

A

Laboratory experimental procedures have highly controlled extraneous variables - a causal relationship between an IV and an operationalised quantitative DV

Researchers have to decide whether to use a scientific, controlled laboratory study or an externally valid, real-life reflective field style study - not plausible to use both as they are dichotomous methodologies

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4
Q

How does Raine et al support the type of experiment being the most important practical issue? (4 points)

A

They conducted a standardised, controlled laboratory procedure to investigate brain functioning in NGRI vs non-murderers

Participants took part in a 32-minute CPT task following a 10-minute practice window

Operationalised DV with measurable units - no subjective interpretation

Matched pairs design prevented extraneous variables confounding the results - cause and effect could be established between brain functioning and those who pleaded guilty to NGRI

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5
Q

How does Skinner support the type of experiment being the most important practical issue? (4 points)

A

Skinner followed a standardised, controlled laboratory experimental procedure - high internal validity

He starved pigeons/rats to 75% of their well-fed weight and placed them in a cage with a food hopper that stopped for 5 seconds

Operationalised DV with measurable units - no subjective interpretation

This allowed cause and effect to be established between the behaviour presented (lever) and the cause (consequence, food reward)

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6
Q

How are Raine and Skinner limited in terms of practical issues? (3 points)

A

Both studies were set in artificial conditions which do not reflect the environment people experience daily

Raine:
Low task validity - the use of the CPT task of identifying targets is not reflective of the everyday brain activities of NGRI murderers

Skinner:
Low ecological validity - people rarely respond to antecedents, and receive consequences without other situational variables in complex social contexts

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7
Q

Why do researchers have to think about the sampling technique? (2 points)

A

Psychologists need to consider participant samples used in their studies to ensure they are representative of the wider population, particularly the generalisability of animals

The sampling method, be it random, opportunity etc will depend on the researcher’s access to the target population

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8
Q

How does Milgram support the importance of sampling techniques as a practical issue? (4 points)

A

Milgram studied the extent that someone would obey the orders of an authority
figure

He used volunteer sampling to get 40 male volunteers aged 20-50 by putting an advertisement in the newspaper

Volunteer sampling may produce biased results due to the Hawthorne effect - people have volunteered due to being interested in the topic so they give overly positive responses, leading to artificially high results

Cooperative volunteers may also show demand characteristics to “please or displease” the researcher depending on what they believe the aim of the study to be - reduced validity

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9
Q

How does Baddeley support the importance of sampling techniques as a practical issue? (3 points)

A

Most studies in psychology recruit Pps through an opportunity sample at a university, which is usually undergraduate students

Baddeley recruited 72 male and female psychology students from a university for this study

The conclusion that LTM encodes semantically is only representative of psychology undergraduates - likely culturally, socio-economically and cognitively different to the whole human population

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10
Q

How can psychologists sample populations effectively? (3 points)

A

Stratified sampling generates a more representative sample population

The target population is divided into subgroups (gender, age and ethnicity for example) and a proportionate number from each subgroup based on occurrence in the population is selected

There tends to be a lack of studies which adopt this sampling method due to time, cost constraints and inaccessibility to accurate demographic data

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11
Q

How is stratified sampling limited as a sampling technique? (2 points)

A

Idealistic but impractical - lack of access to demographic data combined with the impossibility of gaining an accurate measure of all the participant variables that apply to people

Participant samples should not be a primary practical issue to consider when deciding on the methodologies to use - generalisability issues are inevitable

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12
Q

Why do researchers have to think about the type of data they are collecting? (3 points)

A

Researchers need to decide whether they are going to explore a topic descriptively or test a hypothesis

This will in turn determine if they are going to collect quantitative data (numerical units) or qualitative data (descriptive words) to test their aims

Using quantitative data has benefits like objectivity, replication and scientific credibility - however, the depth of the human condition can be overlooked

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13
Q

How does the HM case study support the type of data collected being a practical issue? (3 points)

A

Suffered from anterograde amnesia

Gave huge insight into:
+ The transference of STM to LTM
+ The difference between declarative and non-declarative LTMs

Many experiments, interviews, and observations were conducted on him - they mostly produced qualitative data

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14
Q

What is the 1 strength and 2 weaknesses of case studies? (3 points)

A

Strength:
Qualitative methods can gather insight into thoughts and feelings which more quantitative methods can’t

Weakness:
+ Time-consuming and expensive
+ Researcher may lose their objectivity and elicit investigator effects due to the rapport and bond

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15
Q

What is the conclusion of your practical issues essay? (3 points)

A

The most important practical issues psychologists must consider in designing their research are:
+ Controlled lab studies V Ecologically valid snap-shot studies
+ Snap-shot quantitative data V Longitudinal qualitative data

The least important consideration is the sampling method as this will always be a methodological flaw

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