psyc 270 learning check 2
Correlational Design
-An indicator of the strength of association between two variables -Range: -1 to 1 -Positive: height and weight -Negative: # alcoholic drinks and reaction time -Zero: gender and IQ
Internal analysis
-Break treatment group into one or more subgroups -Test for subgroup differences that are consistent with the favored theory or with competing theories
Time-Series Design
-Collect multiple waves of data from two presumably comparable groups -If similar scores on DV BEFORE manipulation but different scores immediately AFTER, strong evidence manipulation may be responsible
Two Group, Pretest-Posttest Design
-Compare two groups both before and after one group receives a natural manipulation -Strong quasi-experimental design IF we can assume groups were similar before manipulation
Factorial Designs
-Contain two or more IVs that are completely crossed -Crossed: Every possible combination of all the levels of all IVs -2 X 2s are quick and informative -Allow qualification: theory is true under some conditions but not others -Qualification is an interaction
Archival Research
-Examine naturally existing public records to test a theory or hypothesis -Hospital records, marriage licenses, political speeches -Sidanius & Pratto (2000) analysis of death penalty cases
Design
-plan for the structure of a study -Tells us what will be done to whom and when
5 types of non-experimental design
1) Archival research 2) Case studies 3) Single variable studies 4) Observational research 5) Correlational studies
Conceptual Validity
-How well a specific hypothesis maps onto the broader theory -Hypothesis should --Follow logically from theory --Be tough to generate without theory
Survey
-Identify a subset of people in the population to study -Use their answers to estimate answers of the entire population
Ratio
-Like interval scales except has a true zero point -A point at which none of the quantity under consideration is present -Can never have a negative value
One way, multiple groups design
-One IV -IV has three or more levels --Prime: collectivism, American, Individualism, Self, No prime/ neutral prime
Two groups design
-One IV -The IV only has two levels --Experimental (e.g., collectivism prime) --Control (e.g., no prime)
External Validity
-a.k.a. generalizability -Extent to which research findings provide an accurate description of what happens in the real world --To people --To situations
two challenges of survey writing
-judgement phase -response translation phase
Operational confounds
A manipulation influences more than one psychological construct, each of which may influence the DV
Manipulation check
A measure designed to see if a manipulation truly puts people in the psychological state that the experimenter wishes to create
Patching
A researcher adds new conditions to a study to -help establish the size of an effect -test for the influence of confounds -or both
Posttest-Only Design
Compare two similar but nonidentical groups after one and only one of the groups experiences a treatment -2 sections of Intro to Psych --One section completes collectivism word-find puzzle, the other does nothing --Measure prosocial behavior
Third variable
Confound that usually exists in passive observational studies
Nominal
Categorical Meaningful but potentially arbitrary and non-numerical names
Covariation
Changes in one variable must correspond to changes in another variable
two functions of a good design
Enables us to pinpoint effects of the IV on the DV Helps us rule out confounds
noise
Extraneous variables that influence the DV but are evenly distributed across experimental conditions
Internal consistency
Degree to which the total set of items or observations in a multiple-item measure behave in the same way
Single Variable Research
Designed to describe some specific property of a large group of people Typically descriptive research Usually cannot test causality
Factor Analysis
Determines if all items on a measure assess the same psychological construct or if some items are influenced by a different construct(s)
non-experimental design
Does: -Attempt to understand an interpret behavior Does not typically: -Manipulate a variable -Randomly assign participants to condition -Have enough control over situation to decide who receives a treatment or at what time -Search for the cause of a behavior
Mundane realism
Make a study as similar as possible to a real world setting that you care about
Case Study
Making careful analyses of the experiences of a particular person or group Try to explain unusual events by relying on established scientific principles
One-Group, Pretest-Posttest
Measures are taken from a single group of participants both before and after a natural manipulation
Median split
Problem: People near cutoff (barely below or above median) are much more similar to one another than they are to the extreme members of their own group
Bipolar scale
Rate a quantity that deviates in both directions from a zero point
Unipolar scale
Rating begins at a very low value (e.g., 0) and moves up to a subjective maximum point on the dimension of interest
Sampling error (a.k.a. margin of error)
Reflects likely discrepancy between the results we get in a specific sample and results we probably would have gotten from the entire population
Interval
Interval Make use of real numbers designating amounts to reflect differences in magnitude Sometimes has a negative value Unit corresponds to a specific amount of the construct being measured
Observational Research
Investigators record the behavior of people in their natural environments Q: Do students demonstrate more group pride after their school succeeds at athletics compared to after it fails? A: Observe students leaving dorms. Record number wearing UNC gear after a) Lose - b) Win +
Ordinal
Involves order or ranking Provides information about relative Not sensitive to absolute differences between these things
Independent Variable
Variable that is manipulated by the experimenter
Dependent Variable
Variable that is measured by an experimenter
Procedural confounds (a.k.a. environmental confounds)
Something the experimenter did not intend is allowed to covary with the IV
Test-retest reliability
Testing a group of individuals at one time and then having them come back a second time to take the test again
Validity
The relative accuracy or correctness of a statement
random assignment
equate experimental conditions before manipulations are applied in experiment; internal validity
high internal validity
confidently conclude that variations in the IV caused any observed changes in the DV
3 steps of internal validity
covariation, temporal sequence, confound
random selection
increase likelihood that small sample generalizes to population in population surveys; external validity
Temporal sequence
to argue that changes in one variable Cause changes in another, changes in the first variable must precede the changes in the second
Response Translation Phase
Can participants translate internal psychological state into a value on response scale?
Artifact
-Variable held constant in studies that may influence research findings -"the lab" is an artifact
Patched up Designs
Quasi-experimental design plus control groups
Quasi-experiment
Research designs in which researchers have only partial control over their IVs -Participants are assigned to one or more conditions by some means other than random assignment -Typically fewer concerns about external validity
Interobserver agreement/ Interrater reliability
The degree to which different judges independently agree upon an observation or judgment
Internal Validity
The extent to which a set of research findings provides compelling information about causality
One-Group Design
-All participants are in a single group that received a natural or experimental manipulation -Q: Does adopting a collectivist mindset increase prosocial behavior? -All participants solve word-find with collectivist words
Experimental Realism
-Degree to which research is psychologically meaningful to participants -High experimental realism usually requires deception
Statistical Reliability
-Determines inter-item reliability within the scale -Some items are more reliable with their peers than others --higher item-level alpha = good
Nature and Treatment Designs
-Natural groups with experimental treatment design --Two naturally occurring groups are given different treatments --Useful if we can assume: ---Two groups were very similar in important ways before treatment ---Were exposed to different levels of experimental treatment while holding everything else constant Q: Does tax on bottled water reduce consumption across levels of income? Manipulated IV: bottled water tax (yes, no) Measured IV: income DV: consumption of bottle water
Open-ended questions
-Refine structured ratings scales -Use as primary source of data -Code in a number of ways -Coding is resource intensive -Reverts data to numbers that participants could have reported, if asked -May be vague, not provide much of an answer
Person-by-Treatment Design
-Researcher measures at least one IV and manipulates at least one other IV -Person-by-treatment quasi-experiment --Prescreening --Median split ---Problem: People near cutoff (barely below or above median) are much more similar to one another than they are to the extreme members of their own group
Reliability
-The consistency and repeatability of a measure or observation -More is better (less error) for observers, observations, and occasions -Reliability is a necessary but not sufficient condition for validity
Construct Validity
-The extent to which the IVs and DVs in a study represent the abstract, hypothetical variables of interest -Good operational definitions, high construct validity
One Thousand Lives a Month
-Trasylol -blood thinner linked to death -Case study: Randoni's surgery -Archival: hospital records -Single variable research: assess death rate after cardiac surgery when Trasylol was used as a blood thinner
Natural Experiments
-Uses naturally occurring manipulation -All variables are measured; NO random assignment -Focus on events that are fairly arbitrary, but do not occur completely at random -Q: Does water pollution influence support for penalizing companies that pollute? -Q: Does Plumpynut decrease malnutrition and death by starvation in young children?
Census
A body of data collected from every member of a population of interest
Confound
Additional variable that may (a) influence the DV and that (b) varies systematically along with the IV
judgement phase
Are participants thinking about the same question as the researcher?
Experimental Design
Goal #1: See if changes in IV lead to changes in DV Goal #2: Equalize experimental and control groups
Focus group
a small, representative, sample of participants from the group of interest meet to discuss their experiences