Methods in Scientific Research

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Introduction to the Scientific Process

a logical, problem-solving technique have a question, follow a process to get a good answer

Which to use? active or passive

active

HA

alternative hypothesis, temperature has an effect on batting

The example that follows is based on a study by Darley and Latané (1969). The authors were interested in whether the presence of other people has an influence on whether a person will help someone in distress. In this classic study, the experimenter (a female graduate student) had the subject wait in a room with either 0, 2, or 4 participants. The experimenter announces that the study will begin shortly and walks into an adjacent room. In a few moments the person(s) in the waiting room hear her fall and complain of ankle pain. The dependent measure is the number of seconds it takes the subject to help the experimenter. Name the test scenario:

ANOVA

an analysis of variation in an experiment is a test of the hypothesis that the variation in an experiment is no greater than that due to normal variation of individuals' characteristics and error in their measurement name the test:

ANOVA

6th step in Scientific Process

Analyze data

7th step in Scientific Process

Draw conclusions: reject or accept our hypotheses (use conclusions to develop new hypothesis)

3rd step in Scientific Process

Formulate a Hypothesis: "educated guess", review of literature

2nd step in Scientific Process

Gather information: review of literature, look for other experiments

When you finish writing, ask:

Have I said it?

step 3: formulate a hypothesis

Hypothesis: possible answer to a question that can be tested based on observations and knowledge "If then" statement

1st step in Scientific Process

Identify a Problem: specific, narrow, introduction and review of literature

Following the RER test: The medians show that, on average, caffeine appears to have reduced RER from about 98% to 94%, a reduction of 6%. However, there is a great deal of variation between the data values in both samples and considerable overlap between them. So is the difference between the two medians simply due to sampling variation or does the data provide evidence that caffeine does, on average, reduce RER? Name the test scenario:

Mann Whitney test

H0: population medians are equal H1 (non-directional alternative): population medians are not equal

Mann Whitney test

nonparametric equivalent to the independent samples t-test

Mann Whitney test

Step 4: develop and experiment

Materials and Procedure

Correlation is a technique for investigating the relationship between two quantitative, continuous variables, for example, age and blood pressure. ______________ _______________ ______________ (r) is a measure of the strength of the association between the two variables.

Pearson's Correlation Coefficient

Nine students held their breath, once after breathing normally and relaxing for one minute, and once after hyperventilating for one minute. The table indicates how long (in sec) they were able to hold their breath. ____________ _______________ _______________ attempts to answer whether or not there is an association between the two variables, and if so, how strong the association is.

Pearson's Correlation Coefficient

The first step in studying the relationship between two continuous variables is to draw a scatter plot of the variables to check for linearity. The correlation coefficient should not be calculated if the relationship is not linear. For correlation only purposes, it does not really matter on which axis the variables are plotted. However, conventionally, the independent (or explanatory) variable is plotted on the x-axis (horizontally) and the dependent (or response) variable is plotted on the y-axis (vertically). Name the test scenario:

Pearson's Correlation Coefficient

For example, two doctors may assess the condition of eight patients suffering from particular symptoms. To do this they rank the patients from 1 (best) to 8 (worst). A significant association between the sets of ranks by calculating ___________'s rank correlation coefficient (rs) is indicated by p = 0.05, as usual. The value of rs ranges from -1 to +1. Results indicate that there is evidence to suggest good agreement (rs = 0.86) between the doctors' assessments (p = 0.007). Name the test scenario:

Spearman's Coefficient

5th step in Scientific Process

Record and Organize data

Words:

Reduce dead weight words and phrases: get rid of jargon and repetition cut, cut, cut: learn to part with your words watch out for "to be", "there are", very, really, quite, etc. Be specific

ordered categories chronological ranks and do calculations based on them how closely two sets of rankings are related strength of association ***************for my proposal, most conspiracy to least

Spearman's Coefficient

The null and alternative hypotheses are the same as those for the paired samples t-test although they are often stated in terms of the median, thus: H0: in the population the median difference is zero H1: in the population the median difference is not zero

Wilcoxon

an assumption behind this test is that the population distributions are symmetrical, in which case the means and medians are identical

Wilcoxon

nonparametric equivalent to paired t-test

Wilcoxon

Pay attention to your _____! Strip your sentences to just the _____ that ____.

Words! words that tell

Qualitative Traditions: Narrative Designs

focuses on individual experiences reports a chronology of the experiences (use a time sequence of events, chronology sets narrative apart) collects the individual stories told to the researcher or gathered through field texts (autobiographies, interviews, journals) Restories the individual stories (researcher gathers stories and analyzes them for elements of the story, researcher rewrites the story to place it in a chronological sequence, restorying provides a casual link among ideas, info would include interaction, continuity, and situation) Describes the context or setting for the individual stories ( people involved, physical setting, setting may described before events or actions, or can be woven throughout the study) Corroborates throughout the process of research with the individuals whose stories are being reported (participants are activelly involved in the inquiry as it unfolds, relationships between research and participant are negotiated to minimize the potential gap)

Sentences:

follow subject + verb+object (SVO) use strong verbs eliminate negatives, use positive constructions instead

Grounded theory: how does this process work?

general or abstract theory derived from process, action, or interaction views "grounded" in views of participants multiple stages of data collection constant comparison of data theoretical sampling of groups to maximize similarities and differences

Read, pay attention, and intimate

good writing

does not fall into any other literature category the MO dept. of conservation government resources pamphlets

gray literature

choose this when you want to develop a theory grounded in the views of participants

grounded theory

study when the researcher inductively develops or elaborates on a theory by collecting primarily interview data, making multiple visits to the field (theoretical sampling), attempting to develop and interrelate categories (constant comparison) of information, and writing a discursive theory

grounded theory

Some components of a good writer: 3

having something to say logical and clear thinking few simple, learnable rules of style

possible answer to a question that can be tested

hypothesis

Steps of the Scientific Process: 7

identify a problem gather information formulate hypothesis design and experiment record and organize data analyze data draw conclusions (use conclusions to develop new hypothesis)

Dead weight phrases

in the event of in the nature of it has been estimated that it seems that

The variable I (the scientist) change or manipulate

independent variable

a logical interpretation of events based on prior knowledge or opinion, educated guess

inference

A set of measurements can almost always be regarded as measurements on a sample of items from a population of these items, as it is usually impractical or impossible to measure every item in the population. Thus we have to make inferences about the population from the sample.

inferential statistics

sample population sample size-the larger the better

inferential statistics

Independent or paired t-test Chi-squared (difference or association) Spearman Pearson Mann-Whitney Wilcoxon ANOVA

inferential statistics tests

Although 95% confidence intervals are most often reported, you will sometimes see 99% confidence intervals, in which case the confidence interval contains the population parameter with probability 0.99 and will, consequently, be wider than the corresponding 95% confidence interval.

inferential statistics: confidence

This can only be true if the sample is representative of the population, and even then the sample is very unlikely to reflect the population exactly in all respects. That is, there is uncertainty as to how well the sample results reflect the population. Statistical methods have been developed to reduce and quantify this uncertainty.

inferential stats: sample population

To avoid bias the sample items should be selected from the population at random. This means that all members of the population have an equal chance of being in the sample.

inferential stats: sample population

Criteria for choosing a tradition: 4

intent or focus audience personal training personal comfort level

Coding Process

interview transcribe categorize repeated patterns

Qualitative research

involves people in some way, questions about experiences, lots of samples, take data and make big inferences, deep interaction with participants

often used in science published by those involved in the research

journals

a list of all things you need, supplies

materials

Materials and Methods must include: 5 things

materials, methods, IV, DV, control

3 types of measures of central tendency (descriptive statistic)

mean, median, mode

average

mean- measure of CT (descriptive stat)

assign actual number to things, measurable and quantitative height, weight, age

measurement variables

descriptive statistics: averages

measures of central tendency

2 types of descriptive statistics

measures of central tendency measures of dispersion

stats that describe how data varies, or is dispersed show how data differs

measures of dispersion (descriptive stat)

middle

median (measure of CT, descriptive stat)

occurs most

mode (measure of CT, descriptive stat)

collaborates throughout the process of research with the individuals whose stories are being reported

narrative design

collects the individual stories told to the researcher or gathered through field texts

narrative design

describes the context or setting of the individual stories

narrative design

focuses on individual experiences

narrative design

reports a chronology of the experiences

narrative design

restories the individual stories

narrative design

What are the 5 Qualitative Traditions?

narrative research, phenomenology, ethnography, grounded theory, case study

H0

null hypothesis, void, had no effect, inapplicable

What is this about? What patterns exist? Coding type:

open coding

Consider a study in which standing and supine systolic blood pressures were compared. This study was performed on twelve subjects. Their blood pressures were measured in both positions. It is therefore, a paired samples design. Name test scenario:

paired t-test

The difference between the means of the samples is unlikely to be equal to zero (due to sampling variation) and the hypothesis test is designed to answer the question "Is the observed difference sufficiently large enough to indicate that the alternative hypothesis is true?".

paired t-test

used to compare the values of means from two related samples, for example in a "before and after" scenario

paired t-test

most widely respected journals are...

peer reviewed

scientific articles are reviewed by other scientists before being accepted for publication

peer reviewed

as much a philosophy of meaning as a method

phenomenology

identify essence of human experience as described by participants, develop patterns or relationship of meaning

phenomenology

researcher puts aside or "brackets" his/her ideas

phenomenology

seeks to understand human experiences through the meaning of experiences held for each individual

phenomenology

uses small number of subjects over prolonged period of time through lengthy interviews

phenomenology

Step 6: analyze data

pie, line, bar graph

measured by calculating the standard error of the estimate or a confidence interval (usually the 95% confidence interval)

precision-sample size of inferential stats

Journal of Experimental Zoology, Journal of the History of biology

primary lit

all papers that present novel scientific research, but also may include literature reviews, perspectives, and analyses that advance new concepts and viewpoints about data generated by others

primary literature

comprises all scientific literature that presents new scientific data or ideas

primary literature

written by scientists who have done the research themselves, generally published in scholarly journals

primary literature

Vague nouns

problem, situation, approach, method, reaction, component, technique, solution, challenge, difficulty

step by step instructions (some knowledge is assumed), identifies variables used in the experiment

procedure

uses our 5 senses to gather info

qualitative observation

uses numbers to gather info

quantitative observation

comprises summaries of results and ideas from the primary literature written for an audience of scientists with some understanding of the topic

secondary lit

journals that only publish review articles

secondary lit

review articles and perspectives in other journals, many journals publish papers that review topics of current interest: papers in Science published as "articles" and "perspectives"

secondary lit

compile primary sources, citations

secondary sources

What implications does it have? coding type:

selective coding

Observation uses our _______ to gather information

senses

2 most commonly used measures of dispersion

standard deviation and range

Research Proposal Application-Introduction should include: 4 things

statement of the problem-not prose purpose of the study research questions and hypotheses (null and alternate for every question) limitations of the study (age, gender, etc)

Qualitative traditions: grounded theory

study when the researcher inductively develops or elaborates on a theory by collecting primarily interview data, making multiple visits to the field (theoretical sampling), attempting to develop and interrelate categories (constant comparison) of information, and writing a discursive theory

scientists within a discipline often meet to present scientific info focused upon a particular topic. these presentations are often published together as a book

symposia, secondary lit

When two samples are taken from the same population it is unlikely that the means of the two samples will differ significantly. When two samples are taken from two different populations, it is likely that the means of the two samples will differ. Our problem is how to differentiate between these two situations using only the data from the two samples

t-test

enables us to determine the probability that two sample means could have been drawn from the same population of numbers if the probability is sufficiently low (5%) we can claim a "statistically significant difference" 2 groups, 1 with intervention and 1 without

t-test

most important statistical test used in relation to biological variation

t-test

used to compare the values of the means from two samples and test whether it is likely that the samples are from populations having different mean values

t-test

Qualitative Traditions: case study

the study of a "bounded system" or a case/multiple cases, over time through detailed, in -depth data collection involving numerous sources and rich in context, in order to present a substantive picture of the case some researchers consider "the case" an object of study, while others consider it a methodology

Qualitative Traditions: Ethnography

the study of an intact cultural group of an individual, using primarily observational methods of data collection, based on a prolonged period of time in the field, listening and recording the voice of informants in order to generate a cultural portrait both a process and a product Key question: what is the culture like?

passive voice

the subject is acted upon, and the subject doesn't act

Step 2: Gather Information

use references to do background research books, journals, magazines, internet, TV, videos, interview, experts

Identify a Problem

using observations, identify a problem you would like to solve This is a question you do not know the answer to and can't look up. If you can google your question and many thorough answers come up, the question needs tweaking. Finding contradictions or someone disproving your theory is ok! "Why" and "what would happen if" are good ways to start

Step 5: record and organize data

write all observations and measurements use table to organize your data IV on left side, DVs on right side if you have more than one DV, use a new column for each DV

What makes good scientific writing? 2 things

communicates an idea clearly and effectively (takes having something to say and clear thinking) elegant and stylish (time, revision, good editor)

a variable that can represent any value on the scale used to measure the variable (typically interval or ratio variable)

continuous variable

number of Coke drinks per week (1, 1.5, 2) "how much" amount

continuous variable

typically interval or ratio variables

continuous variables

the normal condition that you compare the other conditions to, recreate the conditions you first observed

control variable

Key question: what is the culture like?

ethnography

both a process and a product

ethnography

contextual response to "lived" realities in field setting

ethnography

interaction is group in natural setting over prolonged period of time, primarily observational data

ethnography

the study of an intact cultural group of an individual, using primarily observational methods of data collection, based on a prolonged period of time in the field, listening and recording the voice of informants in order to generate a cultural portrait

ethnography

4th step in Scientific Process

Design and Experiment

7 inferential statistics tests

Independent or paired t-test chi-squared (difference or association) Spearman Pearson Mann-Whitney Wilcoxon ANOVA

first hand accounts, citations

Primary sources

Before you start writing, ask:

What am I trying to say?

Qualitative traditions: Phenomenology

as much a philosophy of meaning as a method the researcher seeks to understand human experiences through the meaning of experiences held for each individual to do this, the researcher puts aside, or "brackets" his/her own ideas "what does this mean?" identify "essence of human experience as described by participants" small number of subjects over prolonged period of time through lengthy interviews develop patterns of relationship of meaning

What is the relationship that explains how the process works? Coding type:

axial coding

Asks "what has happened?", explore event, process or 1 or more individuals in depth bounded by time and activity variety of data collection procedures over time

case study

The study of a "bounded system" or a case/multiple cases, over time through detailed, in -depth data collection involving numerous sources and rich in context, in order to present a substantive picture of the case

case study

gender, race assign a number to, but number represents a type rather than an amount, thus qualitative

categorical variables

A group of students were classified in terms of personality (introvert or extrovert) and in terms of color preference (red, yellow, green or blue) with the purpose of seeing whether there is an association (relationship) between personality and color preference. Data was collected from 400 students and presented in the 2 (rows) x 4 (cols) contingency table. Name the test scenario:

chi-square

The sample data is used to calculate a single number (or test statistic), the size of which reflects the probability (p-value) that the observed difference between the 2 variables has occurred by chance, i.e., due to sampling error. The maternity wards of two hospitals had different preparation for childbirth schemes. A study of mothers who had participated in the schemes asked them to assess their satisfaction with the scheme with specific results. To answer the question 'Is there any evidence of a difference in the satisfaction of the mothers between the two schemes at the two hospitals?', the _________ test is used.

chi-square

used to determine whether an association (or relationship) between 2 categorical variables in a sample is likely to reflect a real association between these 2 variables in the population. In the case of 2 variables being compared, the test can also be interpreted as determining if there is a difference between the two variables. also for nominal, categorical data

chi-square

In the case of 2 variables being compared, the test can also be interpreted as determining if there is an association (or relationship) between the two variables.

chi-square test

The sample data is used to calculate a single number (or test statistic), the size of which reflects the probability (p-value) that the observed association between the 2 variables has occurred by chance, i.e. due to sampling error.

chi-square test

for nominal, categorical data: which test? this related to that *************** for my proposal

chi-square test

used to determine whether a difference between 2 categorical variables in a sample is likely to reflect a real difference between these 2 variables in a population *****************for my proposal

chi-square test

test the relationship between your independent variable and dependent variable depends on the 'type' of data you have

choosing the correct statistical test

is measured in the experiment changes because of the independent variable "depends" on the independent variable

dependent variable

sample size, max/min values, averages and measures of variation of the data about the average many studies use this as a first step, prior to inferential statistics

descriptive statistics

only 2 possible outcomes (yes/no, male or female)

dichotomous categorical variables

can only represent a few specified values on a designated scale (typically nominal, ordinal variables)

discreet variables

male (1) or female (2) "how many" type

discreet variables

typically nominal or ordinal variables

discreet variables

2 things to do with hypotheses:

disprove null hypothesis and accept alternative hypothesis The warmer it is, the better the bat performs (directional alternative hypothesis)

A study of the effect of caffeine on muscle metabolism used eighteen male volunteers who each underwent arm exercise tests. Nine of the men were randomly selected to take a capsule containing pure caffeine one hour before the test. The other men received a placebo capsule. During each exercise the subject's respiratory exchange ratio (RER) was measured. (RER is the ratio of CO2 produced to O2 consumed and is an indicator of whether energy is being obtained from carbohydrates or fats). Name the test scenario:

t-test The question of interest to the experimenter was whether, on average, caffeine changes RER. The two populations being compared are "men who have not taken caffeine" and "men who have taken caffeine". If caffeine has no effect on RER the two sets of data can be regarded as having come from the same population

Example of null hypothesis

temperature has no effect on batting

generally written for a nonscientific audience or for scientists in other disciplines

tertiary lit

science magazines, lay magazines, text books

tertiary lit

no citations, use common knowledge

tertiary sources


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