Zusammenfassung der Ressource
OCR PSYCHOLOGY: G541 -
PSYCHOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS
- EXPERIMENTS
- TYPES OF EXPERIMENT
- LABORATORY
- Controlled enviroment; IV is manipulated
- STRENGTH: Precise control of variables/easy to replicate
- LIMITATION: Low in ecological validity
- FIELD
- Natural enviroment; IV is manipulated
- STRENGTH: High in ecological validity
- LIMITATION: Hard to control confounding variables
- QUASI
- The IV is not manipulated; naturally
occuring.
- STRENGTH: Not as artifical as a laboratory experiment
- LIMITATION: Harder to establish a casual relationship
- EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
- MATCHED PAIRS DESIGN
- Different ppts for each condition; matched on a key variable e.g. IQ, age, gender
- STRENGTH: Controls ppt varibles without order effects
- LIMITATION: Time consuming/expensive
- INDEPENDENT MEASURES
- Using different ppts for each condition of experiement
- STRENGTH: No order effects
- LIMITATION: Potential errors from individual differences
- REPEATED MEASURES
- Testing the individuals in two or more conditions
- STRENGTH: Individual differences removed as a potential confounding variable
- LIMITATION: Order effects; use counterbalancing
- SAMPLING METHODS
- OPPORTUNITY
- Whoever fits the critesa and is present at the time of the study
- STRENGTH: Easy in terms of time and money
- LIMITATION: Can produce a biased sample; research may choose people from same social/cultural group
- RANDOM
- Every member of target population has an equal chance of being selected
- STRENGTH: Provides an unbiased representitave sample of your target population
- LIMITATION: Time consuming and often impossible to carry out
- VOLUNTEER
- Ppts volunteer to be part of the study due to response to an advert
- STRENGTH: Quick and relatively easy to do
- LIMITATION: Ppts may not be representitive of target population
- HYPOTHESIS
- TWO-TAILED:
- Does not predict the expected direction of results
- ONE-TAILED:
- Predicts the expected direction of results
- NULL:
- States that there will be no significant difference/results are due to chance
- ALTERNATIVE:
- States the expected results but with no direction; there will be a significant difference
- ETHICS
- Participants confidentuality
- Personal information will NOT be published; will be confidential
- Consent (informed)
- The ppts must give informed consent to take part in the study
- No physical or mental harm
- Researchers must protect ppts from harm during research
- Right to withdraw
- Make sure the ppts are clear that they can withdraw from the study at any point
- Debriefing
- Make sure any stress from the procedure is removed; leave them feeling positive about the research
- Deception
- Tell ppts true aim of research (unless absolutely necessary to decieve them)
- NON-EXPERIMENTAL
- SELF-REPORT
- INTERVIEW
- Spoken questionnaire, can be structured (pre-determined q's) or
unstructed
- STRENGTH: Ppts can descirbe their own experiences, rather then inferring it from observation
- LIMITATION: Social desirability basis
- QUESTIONNAIRE
- Set of questions; in a highly structured written form
- STRENGTH: Study large samples of people fairly quickly and easily
- LIMITATIONS: Social desirabilty basis
- TYPES OF Q'S
- OPEN QUESTION
- Not restricted to catergories, allows ppt to expand
- STRENGTH:
- Rich in qual data, in-depth responses
- LIMITATION:
- Hard to compare to other ppts
- CLOSED QUESTION
- Allow for limited reponse, ppts can't expand
- STRENGTH:
- Quan data, easy to compare to other ppts
- LIMITATION:
- No in-depth insight/responses
- LIKERT SCALE
- A statement in which a participant has to agree or disagree on a numerical scale
- STRENGTH:
- More detail than a simple yes or no, gives an idea on how ppts feel
- LIMITATION:
- Ppts tend choose 'middle' option to appear less 'extreme'
- FIXED CHOICE
- Questions are phrased so ppts can give a yes, no or maybe response
- STRENGTH:
- Easy to measure and compare
- LIMITATION:
- Ppts may feel that their desired choice is not there
- OBSERVATION
- PARTICIPANT
- The researcher is also a ppt in the activity being studied
- NON-PARTICIPANT
- Where the research does not join in with the activity being observed
- COVERT
- Researcher is hiding the fact that they are observing
- OVERT
- Researcher makes it aware to ppts that they are observing them
- EVENT SAMPLING
- Predetermined catergories, tallys every time the behaviour is seen
- if too many observations happen at once you could miss behaviour
- TIME SAMPLING
- Writes down all behaviour at time intervals, e.g. every five minutes
- Some behaviours may be missed w/ writing down all behaviour
- PILOT STUDY
- Practice study to make sure everything is working
- Improves inter-rater reliabilty
- CORRELATION
- Relationship between two variables
- POSITIVE
- As one variable increases, so does theother
- NEGATIVE
- As one variable increases, the other decreases
- NO CORRELATION
- There is no association between the two variables
- LIMITATION: Does not show cause and effect
- STRENGTH: Can show the strength of a relationship between two variables
- CASE STUDY
- A detailed study of an individual or small group
- STRENGTH:
- Useful in revealing the origins of abnormal behaviour; relates to ppts real life; in-depth, picture providing qual data
- LIMITATION:
- Cannot generalise results as it only carried out on individuals or small groups
- VALIDITY
- FACE VALIDITY
- To what extent does the research does the research appear to measure what it set out to, on the surface
- ECOLOGICAL VALIDITY
- Is it representitave of a real life situation?
- TEMPORAL VALIDITY
- Will the research remain valid over time?
- POPULATION VALIDITY
- To what extent can the results be generalised beyond the present situation
- RELIABILTY
- How consistent a study or measuring device is
- INTERNAL:
- To what extent does the measure is consistent within itself
- EXTERNAL:
- To what extent does the measure vary from one use to another