null
US
Sign In
Sign Up for Free
Sign Up
We have detected that Javascript is not enabled in your browser. The dynamic nature of our site means that Javascript must be enabled to function properly. Please read our
terms and conditions
for more information.
Next up
Copy and Edit
You need to log in to complete this action!
Register for Free
2554628
Observation
Description
Investigations
No tags specified
psychology
investigations
Mind Map by
Kathey
, updated more than 1 year ago
More
Less
Created by
Kathey
over 9 years ago
14
0
0
Resource summary
Observation
Examples
Bandura
Used covert time sample d observation to record the children's aggressive behaviour
Rosenhan
Used participant observation to record the behaviour on psychiatric wards
Milgram
Observed the signs of stress/distress in the behaviour of the participants
Sampling Observational Data
Event Sampling
Observing a event that has been defined/categorised before
Observer records every time this event occurs
Weakness: If too many of the obeserving subject happen at once, it's hard to record every single one
Strength: Less chance of missing the behaviour when specifically looking for a certain behaviour
Time Sampling
Specific time frames
Records what behaviours occur at the end of each time frame
Typically more than one observer
e.g. Bandura
Weakness: some behaviours may be missed and make it not representative
Strength: less time-consuming as the observation is structured and timed
Inter-observer (rater) Reliability
Pilot study
To check that all observers are recording the behaviour similarly
Advantages
No demand characteristics in a natural, uncontrived setting
Behaviour first hand not through self report methods
Disadvantages
No explanations of behaviours from participants because they have no knowledge of the observations
Bias or misinterpreting observers
Naturalistic observations are difficult to replicate
Inter-observer (rater) reliability has to be done with more than one observer, which isn't always easy to establish
Ethics
Naturalistic observations
No informed consent
Participants should be observed in public where they are less likely to be distressed when finding out about the observation
If the location of the observation is identifiable, not protecting confidentiality may be unethical
Types of Observation
Participant Observations
The observer becomes part of the observation
Disadvantage
Demand characteristics
Observer bias
Naturalistic Observations
Covert Observations
Participants are not fully aware of observation e.g. Observers may use on-way mirrors (stay hidden)
Overt Observations
Participants know they are being observed
Natural environment with no manipulation from the observers
Unstructured Observations
Qualitative data
Observers record what they see
Structured Observations
Quantitative data
Recorded through categorising behaviour
Controlled Observations
Keep some variables controlled, normally in a laboratory or natural environment
Show full summary
Hide full summary
Want to create your own
Mind Maps
for
free
with GoConqr?
Learn more
.
Similar
History of Psychology
mia.rigby
Biological Psychology - Stress
Gurdev Manchanda
Psychology subject map
Jake Pickup
Bowlby's Theory of Attachment
Jessica Phillips
Psychology A1
Ellie Hughes
Memory Key words
Sammy :P
Psychology | Unit 4 | Addiction - Explanations
showmestarlight
The Biological Approach to Psychology
Gabby Wood
Chapter 5: Short-term and Working Memory
krupa8711
Cognitive Psychology - Capacity and encoding
T W
Nervous Systems and the Brain - Lecture 1
Georgina Burchell
Browse Library