The Method Section
specimen
biological matter (spit, blood)
materials
chemicals, drugs
is sample size adequate?
consider purpose, previous research, generalizability, variability in the attribute of interest, research design
data analysis
describes how the data will be organized, summarized, assessed; link between method and results
procedures
describes the research protocol (what was done with the participants with the materials, good for replication); describe test environment and subject instructions
ratio
ordered levels (difference between levels is equal and there is a true zero; there can be an absence in what you're looking at) ex: weight
what is in the method
overall design of the study; three sections: participants, measure/materials/apparatus, procedures; may also include section on data analysis
behavioral instruments
questionnaires, scales, observations
interval
three or more ordered categories (difference between levels is equal but no true zero) ex: temperature
ordinal
three or more ordered categories (some kind of meaningful rank in the ordering); ex: class rank
apparatus
tobii eye-tracker
nominal
two or more unordered categories (number is not meaningful, we make it meaningful) ex: sex (1=male, 2=female)
standardized instruments
was standardized on large normative populations; most are standardized; all have a manual
electronic instruments
ways to measure, record, and analyze; can measure things that are not observable; issue that can lead to faulty error (instrumentation error, calibration effects)
behavioral instruments
ways to observe (noting, counting); two forms: standardized, nonstandardized
measure
weschler intelligence scale
who is the sample
a subset of the population of interest; ideally want to generalize to the population of interest
instrumentation
hardware, equipment
nonstandardized instruments
have not been standardized; can be brand new, coding scheme; can be widely used but haven't undergone process of becoming standardized; provide info on reliability and validity
why is the method important?
helps reader critically evaluate the results of the study; results don't mean anything if you don't know how you got them; identify research strategy and design; how threats were addressed
measures
identify the measures/materials/apparatus use to examine the variables of interest
levels of measurement
nominal, ordinal, interval, ratio
device
ruler, timer
what is measurement
rules for assigning numbers to objects/attributes/features; classify as either instrumental measures of physical variables (heart rate, airflow) or observational measures of behavioral variables (IQ, gestures); obtained using instrumentation, devices, behavioral instruments
sex vs. gender
sex=biological; gender=cultural role
participants vs. subjects
shift from conducting research on to conducting research with