comm 201 exam 2

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conduct experiments

1. introduce & obtain consent 2. randomly assign 3. manipulate the independent variable 4. measure the dependent variable 5. debrief the participants

experimental research key components

1. random assignment 2. independent variable (cause) 3. dependent variable (effect) 4. control (comparison)

solomon 4-group design

Pr T O1 Pr X O2 T O3 X O4 all have RA Pr= questions about school T= review X= no review O= grade

post-test nonequivalent groups design

T O1 X O2 ex. class gets review, half doesn't

true experimental designs

T O X O RA- equal chance in being in either group

experimental notation

T-treatment O-outcome X-control Pr- pretest RA- random assignment

validity

accuracy; systematic errors

telephone surveys

advantages: can call anyone-representative disadvantages: hang-up; overrepresentation of older people; excluding

online surveys

advantages: cheap; data is already entered disadvantages: lower quality data

mailed surveys

advantages: send anything anywhere disadvantages: low response rate; 7%

subject validity

an opinion

convergent validity

associate/relate positively to other things that are real

cluster

break people into groups, but only select from some groups

stratified random

breaking people into groups and randomly pick from each group; why? to have equal numbers; better for sub populations

concurrent validity

clout; who has skill/ability right now?

reliability

consistency and stability, can you consistently get the same result?; random errors

interceder reliability

do multiple coders see the same thing

perceptual questions

do you know the answer? yes or no ex.how many planets in solar system?

construct validity

does my construct even exist? is clout real?

systematic

every Nth person

experimenter expectancy effects

experimenter has a bias (they see what they want to see)

regression to the mean

extreme scores have a tendency to move toward the average

evaluation apprehension

fear of being tested for something; nervous being watched

types of behavioral questions

frequency?; duration?; timing?

likert scales

full sentence; indicative level on agreement

test-retest reliability

give two test; test time 1, test time 2- IQ tests

semantic differential scales

has a partial sentence; good 123 bad fun 123 not fun expensive 123 inexpensive ex. I feel that wvu is...

types of indicators for attitudes

how do I ask survey questions to measure people's attitudes?

attitude questions

how you feel about something? invaluative judgment good vs bad

internal consistency reliability

if you know your answer to Q1 you can predict their answer to Q2

face validity

look at something and it doesn't look right

discriminant validity

look for negative relationship to something that is real

criterion-related validity

measuring skills or abilities

pre-experimental designs (quasi)

no RA

quota

non-random stratified sample; break into groups and pick who you want

assumption

not everyone has equal chance of getting picked

experiments

only research that allows us to make casual statement

maturation

people change over time

convenience

pick people who are easy to find

simple random

picking one person at a time at random

overcoming disadvantages of survey research

pretest surveys- small group take it before everyone else; short- at max is 4 pages/120 questions; cover letter

threatening behavioral questions

questions people about behaviors they don't want to talk about

problems with random sampling

sampling error; shit happens- random uncontrollable stuff

sampling error

shit happens

face-to-face interviewing

sit down and ask questions advantages: see non verbals; more than yes/no- descriptive data disadvantages: lying; can only interview 1 person at a time

history

something outside the study affects something in the study

behaviors

something you do

reasons for using non probability samples

studying something brand new

cross sectional designs

survey at one point in time; snapshot- doing something and take a pic in the moment

longitudinal designs

surveys overtime

sampling bias

systematic difference between sample and population; population is bias

split-half reliability

take a measure, split it in half, compare the halves

demand characteristics

the participants figures out what the experimenter is focusing on

content validity

we make sure we measure all aspects of a variable

knowledge

what do people know

attrition

when people drop out of your study

network

when we use other people to collect data

purposive

when you choose people who meet a specific characteristic

predictive validity

who has skill/ability in the future?


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