research methods
4 steps of measurement process
1. Define the concept theoretically 2. Develop an operational definition 3. implementing the measure 4. evaluate the measure
Measures of different constructs
Allows the researcher to address more research questions in a single study
BRUSO
Brief, Relevant, Unambiguous, Specific, and Objective
Which of the following are not a type of counterbalancing?
Incomplete Counterbalancing
Which of the following is not a type of control condition?
Leave Out Control Condition
Measures of the same construct
Multiple measures of the same construct, Can be analyzed separately, Or can be combined to produce single measure of that construct, Must have strong internal consistency reliability
why would a researcher create a measure?
No existing measure of the construct of interest, Existing measures are either too difficult or time-consuming to use
Which of the following best describes the effect where participants perform a task better in later conditions because they have had a chance to practice it?
Practice Effect
Quasi-experiments are missing which of the following safeguards?
Random Assignment and Counterbalancing
At which part of the procedure is a manipulation check usually completed?
Right at the end of the procedure
Which of the following is a disadvantage of using a within-subjects design?
This design makes it easier for participants to guess the hypothesis
operational defintion
a definition of the variable in terms of precisely how it is to be measured
concurrent validity
a form of criterion validity where the criterion is measured at the same time as the construct
convergent validity
a form of criterion validity whereby new measures are correlated with existing established measures of the same construct
predictive validity
a form of validity whereby the criterion is measured at some point in the future
ratio level
a measurement that involves assigning scores in such a way that there is a true zero point that represents the complete absence of the quantity
ordinal level
a measurement that involves assigning scores so that they represent the rank order of the individuals
interval level
a measurement that involves assigning scores using numerical scales in which intervals have the same interpretation throughout
split half correlation
a score that is derived by splitting the items into two sets and examining the relationship between the two sets of scores in order to assess the internal consistency of a measure
Cronbach's alpha
a statistic that measures internal cnsistency among items in a measure
factoral designs
a study with multiple independent variables
Psychometrics
a subfield of psychology concerned with the theories and techniques of psychological measurement; psychological measurement is referred to as psychometrics
experiment
a type of research study, different that correlational research or descriptive research
criterion
a variable that theoretically should be correlated with the construct being measured
between subjects design
an experiment where each participant is tested in one condition
within subjects design
an experiment where participants are tested in all conditions
confounding variable
an extraneous variable that varies systematically with the independent variable.
context affect
context affects responses
conceptual definition
describes the behaviors and internal processes that make up a psychological construct, along with how it relates to other variables.
random assignment
each participant has an equal chance of being assigned to each condition, different from random selection
the big five
five broad dimensions that capture much of the variation in human personality. openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism
levels of measurement
four categories, or scales, of measurement (nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio) that specify the types of information that a set of scores can have, and the types of statistical procedures that can be used with the scores
close ended question
how old are you, quantitative
Measurment
is the assignment of scores to individuals so that the scores represent some characteristic of the individuals
survey formats
mail, in person, online, phone
self report measures
measures in which participants report on their own thoughts, feelings, and actions
behavioral measures
measures in which some other aspect of participants behavior is observed and recorded
physiological measures
measures that involve recording any of a wide variety of physiological processes, including heart rate and blood pressure, galvanic skin response, hormone levels, and electrical activity and blood flow in the brain
double blind study
neither experimenters nor participants know what group participants are in
the weakest quasi experimental research design
one group posttest only
linear regression
predictor variable predicts the value of a criterion variable
constructs
psychological variables that represent an indivduals mental state or experience, often not directly observable, such as personality traits, emotional states, attitudes, and abilities.
which level of measurement has a true zero?
ratio
reliability
refers to the consistency of a measure
Quasi-experimental research
research that resembles experimental research but is not true experimental research
item order effect
responses are effected by earlier survey questions
When creating a new measure, a researchers ought to strive for measures that are
simple and include clear instructions and practice items
When a participants respond in a way they are expected to, this is known as
social desirability
Which of the following validities best describes an experiment where the data are properly treated and the researcher's conclusions are sound?
statistical validity
demand characteristics
subtle cues that reveal how the researcher expects them to respond in the experiment
counterbalancing
systematically varying the order of conditions across participants
internal consistency
the consistency of peoples responses across the items on a multiple item measure
main effect
the effect of one independent variable average across levels of all other independent variables
content validity
the extent to which a measure reflects all aspects of the construct of interest
face validity
the extent to which a measurement method appears on a superficial examination, to measure the construct of interest
inter rater reliability
the extent to which different observers are consistent in their judgements
criterion validity
the extent to which peoples scores on a measure are correlated with other variables that one would expect them to be correlated with
discriminant validity
the extent to which scores on a measure of a construct that are not correlated with measures of other, conceptually distinct, contructs and thus discriminate between them
validity
the extent to which the scores from a measure represent the variable they are intended to
single blind study
the participants do not know what condition they are in
open ended questions
what do you enjoy about doing your job, qualitative
psychosocial effects
when an experimenters attitude/personality affects participants behavior
biosocial effects
when an experimenters characteristics affect participants behaviors
socially desirable responding
when participants respond in ways that they think are socially acceptable
converging operations
when psychologists use multiple operational definitions of the same construct, either within a study or across studies
experimenter bias
when researchers biases inadvertently affect the participants behaviors
test retest reliability
when researchers measure a construct that they assume to be consistent across time, then the scores they obtain should also be consistent across time
sampling bias
when sample is not representative of the whole population