Week 6 Flashcards

1
Q

Why is quantitative research done?

A
  • to describe the world beyond an individual person’s experiences
  • to test ideas
  • to reveal scientific laws or principles
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2
Q

Why is qualitative research done?

A
  • reveal individual truths based on people’s unique interpretations, feelings, values and beliefs
  • attempt to understand individual’s perspectives
  • more concerned with developing explanatory theories rather than rigorously testing theories
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3
Q

What are quantitative research methods?

A
  • large sample sizes
  • small amount of information
  • probability sampling
  • inflexible study designs
  • accuracy and consistency
  • numerical data is statistically analysed
  • answering a specific research question
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4
Q

What are qualitative research methods?

A

-small sample sizes
-large amount of information
non-probability sampling
-not necessarily consistent data collection methods
-little or no statistical analysis

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5
Q

What is an intervention study?

A

researchers do something to bring about a change and measure the amount of change after the intervention compared with before the study

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6
Q

What experimental designs of intervention studies?

A

RCTs and non-randomised controlled trials

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7
Q

What does PICO stand for?

A

population, intervention, comparison, outcome

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8
Q

What is an observational study?

A

no deliberate treatment, but researchers allow events to happen naturally, researcher observes what happens passively rather than attempting to instigate changes

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9
Q

What is descriptive research?

A

describes a sample and compares groups within a sample on their characteristics or opinions

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10
Q

What are diagnostic accuracy studies?

A

evaluate how well a diagnostic assessment procedure:

  • correctly identifies people who have the health condition the procedure is designed to detect
  • correctly identifies people who do not have the health condition
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11
Q

What is epidemiological research?

A

looks at how diseases and health conditions arise among various groups, defined by genetic characterisics, location and lifestyles with the aim of identifying hazards that make people sick

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12
Q

What are the two study designs for epidemiological research?

A
  • cohort studies - comparing the rate at which a health condition occurs among people exposed to a hazard and the rate for other people not exposed
  • case-control: comparing rates of prior exposure to a hazard among people with a health condition
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13
Q

Prospective study

A

using earlier events to treat later events, working fowards

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14
Q

Retrospective study

A

work backwards in time, starts with effects and measures what happens earlier that might have increased risk

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15
Q

Longitudinal study

A

tracks people over time to ssee what happens

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16
Q

Cross-sectional

A

works at a single point in time

17
Q

What is nominal measurement?

A

classifies people, places, objects or events into named groups

18
Q

What is ordinal measurement?

A

records rank order of items eg gold, silver, bronze

19
Q

What is interval measurement?

A

every point on the scale is separated by the same amount

20
Q

What is ratio measurement?

A

similar to interval, but zero is defined as nothing

21
Q

What is the independent variable?

A

the treatment and control or placebo conditions

22
Q

What is the dependent variable?

A

what is measured

23
Q

What is reliability?

A

consistency over repeated measurement and getting the same result from multiple measurements

24
Q

What are the 4 types of reliability?

A

intra-rater, inter-rater, test-retest and alternate or parallel forms

25
Q

Intra-rater reliability

A

Measurements by the same person measuring the same thing at the same time are consistent.

26
Q

Inter-rater

A

Measurements by two different people measuring the same thing at the same time are consistent.

27
Q

Test-retest

A

Measurements of the same unchanging thing using the same methods remain consistent over time.

28
Q

Alternate or parallel forms

A

Different methods or equipment for measuring the same unchanging thing give consistent results.

29
Q

What is validity?

A

accuracy of measurements

30
Q

What are the four types of validity?

A

construct, content, face and internal

31
Q

Construct validity

A

Whether a test or measurement system measures only the concept or idea that its developers claim or intend it to measure in the relevant population.

32
Q

content validity

A

Whether a measurement system measures all or only part of what it’s supposed to measure

33
Q

face validity

A

Whether a measurement or test appears to measure what it’s expected or intended to measure, important if a test and its results are taken seriously by people using the test.

34
Q

internal consistency

A

Whether questions on a test or scale measure the same concept.