Midterm 1- Research Writing

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Applied research

study completed to develop a product or solve and immediate practical problem.

Explanation

taking an event and treating it as an instance of a larger system of things

Repeatability

the ability of operational definitions and methods to be used by different researchers.

Rules of correspondence

the degree to which a theory's constructs and abstract calculus can be applied to actual experience

Intersubjectivity

the degree to which different researchers with essentially different beliefs draw essentially the same interpretations of the meaning of observations.

Item to total reliability

computing measurement reliability by correlation of items with the total test

Split-half reliability

computing measurement reliability by diving a test into two parts, scoring them separately, and checking the consistency between the two scores

Alternate forms reliability

constructing different forms of the same test from a common pool of measurement items, giving them to a group of people, and determining the degree of consistency between them

Opinions

interpretations of the meaning of collections of facts

Qualitative methods

involves in-depth, case oriented study of a relatively small number of cases, including the single-case study. Seeks detailed knowledge of specific cases, often with the goal of finding out "how" things happen. Primary goal is to make the facts understandable.

Statistics

quantitatave reports based on observations in a sample (contrasted with the study of quantitative information)

Problems

questions we expect to answer through research.

Casual argument

reasoning that "a given factor is responsible for producing certain other results"

Secondary sources

reports provided by individuals who do not have firsthand experience with the events reported.

Primary sources

reports provided by individuals who have firsthand experience with the events reported

Basic research

research completed to learn about relationships among variables, regardless of any immediate commercial product of service.

Organized skepticism

researchers are responsible for verifying the results on which they base their work (do not accept claims blindly)

Communality

researchers are willing to share knowledge freely and contribute to public knowledge

Disinterestedness

researchers must ban ulterior motives and must be relatively free from bias. Any known or possible biases must not be admitted. Means that they don't have a financial stake in the outcome.

Universalism

scientific laws are the same everywhere. A scientific law states a relation between phonemena that is invariable under the same conditions.

Manipulated independent variables

sometimes called "stimulus variables" because researchers introduce and control them in experiments

Theory first inquiry

sometimes called the deductive approach to research, a method of inquiry that develops theory and then gathers data to test it (particularly it's limits)

Data first inquiry

sometimes called the inductive approach to research, a method of inquiry that starts with gathering information and follows by developing theoretic explanations (inductive approach

Definitions

statements asserting that one term may be substituted for another

Null hypotheses

statistical hypotheses that state that there is no relationship between variables.

Communication

the field of communication focuses on how people use messages to generate meanings within and across various contexts, channels, and media. The field promotes the effective and ethical practice of human communication.

Reliability

the internal consistency of a measure.

Abstract calculus

the logical structure of relationships in a theory (if p, then q)

Description

the lowest level of theorizing in which behavior is characterized into different forms

Control

the power to direct things.

Falsification

the requirement that any theory must deal with statements that could be falsified by data and information if the theory were untrue

tentativeness

the requirements that scholars recognize that a theory's answers are provisional

Message

the set of verbal and nonverbal cues communicators exchange.

Normative and prescriptive theory

theories whose principles involve defining the qualities that make communication meaningful or desirable

Quasi interval measures

though perhaps not measures strictly on the interval or ratio level, data that share enough qualities of interval data to permit the use of interval level statistical tools

Research is a reductive process

use concepts to help "reduce the confusion of particular events and objects"

Nominal level measurement

use of numbers as simple identification of variables

Research is a sound argument

uses logic and the methods to evaluate arguments.

Dependent variables

variable whose values or activities are presumed to be conditioned on the independent variable in the hypothesis.

measures/assigned variables

variables not introduced or controlled by the researcher but carefully observed and measured.

Moderate variables

variables that mediate the independent variable's prediction of the dependent variable

Independent variables

variables that predict outcomes (dependent variables) posited in hypotheses

Method of Tenacity

when we claim to know something because we have always known it.

Verbal cues

words people use in communication.

Theory

a body of interrelated principles that explain or predict

Variable

a characteristic to which numbers may be assigned

Research is data driven

applies only to things that can be quantified.

Circularity

definitions that simply repeat things

A priori method

claims knowledge before having any experience with it (all men are created equal)

Psuedoscience

"fake science" in which the self-correcting nature of science is absent and scientific claims are made without serious regard for competent use of the scientific method

Nonverbal cues

communication elements beyond the words themselves.

K-R 20

Kuder-Richardson formula 20 for reliability, used when researchers want to determine the reliability of a measure that has items that are scored as "correct" or "incorrect" answers

Epistemalogy

Reality is "waiting to be discovered through the five senses".

Argument from example and generalization

a method of reasoning taking some particular cases and arguing that what is true of instances is generally true in the population of events

Argument from analogy

a method of reasoning that compares "two things known to be alike in one or more features and suggests that they will be alike in other features as well"

Trial and error method

claims knowledge bby making repeated trials to eliminate unacceptable answers

Constant

a characteristic to which only one number may be assigned

Method of Authority

a claim is accepted because authority figures have accepted it

Reliability coefficient

a correlation of the internal consistency of a measure

Conceptual definition

a definition that relies on other concepts to describe a term

Operational definition

a description of what is to be observed by specifying what researchers must do to make observations.

normative science

a discipline that systematically studies man's attempts to determine what is correct, valuable, good, or beautiful

Cronbach's coeffecient alpha

a formula for reliability, used when researchers want to determine the reliability of a measure that has no "correct" answer

Research

a process of asking a question (or related series of questions) and then initiating a systematic process to obtain valid answers to that question.

Attenuation

a reduction in the size of observed effects because of measurement imperfections

Working hypothesis

a tentative hypothesis assumed for the purposes of initiating research and subject to change as research progresses

Rule

a theory that explains a pattern of effects by referring to human intentions, reasons, or goals. Express patterns of expected activity, though changing intentions, reasons, or goals may make people occasionally appear inconsistent.

Law

a verbal statement, supported by such ample evidence as not to be open to doubt unless much further evidence is obtained, of the way events of a certain class consistently and uniformly occur

Science

a way of testing statements by systematic application of the scientific method

Reports

accounts of what took place whether by participants or by outside observers

Research is partial

advance tentative-but meaningful- insights for communication phenomena.

Hypothetical constructs

also known as concepts, constructs for which direct observations cannot be made. ex: individual needs

Literal analogy

an analogy that compare something to an event or object that really exists

Figurative analogy

an analogy that compares something to a hypothetical situation

Hypothesis

an expectation about events based on generalizations of the assumed relationships between variables.

model

an expression that not only states relationshps but displays them

Measurement

assigning numbers to variable according to some system

Interval level measurement

assignment of numbers to items as a matter of degrees such that "intervals between numbers are equal in size"

Ratio level measurement

assignment of numbers to items such that "any adjoining values are the same distance apart and in which there is a true zero point"

Arguments

claims advanced on the basis of reasoning from evidence.

Categorical data

data taking the form of identification of attributes or levels of variable

Continuous variables

data taking the form of numbers indicating matters of degree on some variable

Inductive reasoning

deals with general inferences we make on the basis of examples of instances.

Factual evidence

descriptions and characterizations of things used to support arguments

Prediction

descriptions of what can be expected in subsequent tests to be made.

Intercoder reliability

determining the consistency of different raters who respond to the same events by using some sort of check sheet

Serendipity

finding something valuable while looking for something else.

Constructs

generalizations about observables according to some common property (summary descriptions about collections of specific variables)

Test-retest reliability

giving the measure twice and reporting consistency between scores

Quantitative methods

inquiries in which observations are expressed predominantly in numerical terms. Has two branches- surveys and experiments. Tend to be explanatory.

Nondirectional material hypotheses

hypotheses that state simply that there will be some kind of relationship between variables (sometimes called "two-tailed" hypotheses because of the way statistics are used to test them)

Directional material hypotheses

hypotheses that state the form of predicted differences.

Metatheories

indicate notions beyond the theories themselves.

Communality

individual researchers pool their findings and build a collective body of knowledge about how the world operates.

Evidence

information used to support claims

Ordinal level measurement

measurement involving rank order on some variable

Argument from definition

method of reasoning in which people submit that things do or do not belong in a certain class

Research is capable of replication

must be able to reduplicate to see if findings are generally true or accidental.

Parameter

numbers computed from a population

Scientific method

observe, develop, test, establish

Direct classification variables

operational definitions that rely on simple identification or classification of observable characteristics of information

Expert Opinion

opinions from people who have special knowledge or training in the field of inquiry (in contrast with lay opinions, which come from people without expertise in the subject under discussion)

Ethical and rhetorical theories

principles that describe good and effective communication, respectively.

Research is systematic

productive research follows steps that carry out some sort of design.


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