Validity

Cards (29)

  • What is validity
    refers to the extent to which a study has tested or measured what it set out to measure
  • What is internal validity
    refers to the extent to which a study measures what it set out to measure (procedurally) at the start of the research e.g if a personality test accurately measures a participant's personality traits
  • What leads to high internal validity
    high control of extraneous variables in procedure = high internal validity - as allows the researcher to simply measure what they set out to measure in their aim (e.g. effect of IV on DV) + not allow any other variables to impact. if extraneous variables aren't controlled they can confound the results
  • What are the 5 type of extraneous variable
    • situational variables
    • individual differences
    • researcher effects
    • demand characteristics
    • social desireability
  • Situational variables
    any factors within the environment that can affect participants behaviour/results e.g noise, time of day, crowded/isolated places, temperature etc
  • Individual differences
    any differences between participants not accounted for that may impact their behaviour e.g age, gender, mood, background, ethnicity, IQ etc
  • Researcher effects
    if the researcher acts differently to different participants/conditions (e.g way instructions are delivered) it can impact how Ps behave. they shouldn't give any cues to P's about what is expected of them that could encourage certain behaviours (e.g demand characteristics)
  • Demand characteristics
    when the participant figures out the aim so change their behaviour to fit in line with the aim. unnatural behaviour.
  • Social desirability
    when a participant change their natural behaviour to make them seem socially desirable and acceptable but may not be their truthful behaviour
  • What is external validity
    refers to the extent to which the findings of a study can be generalised to factors outside of the research.
  • External validity example Q

    outline one thing that could effect the generalisability of this study
  • What is ecological validity
    the extent to which the task and/or setting reflect real life situations and can therefore be applied/generalised to real life situations.
  • What is population validity
    the extent to which the sample involved in the study is representative of the wider target population of the study + can therefore be applied/generalised to the wider target population.
    if a study has low population validity then there will be difficulties in generalising the results to other individuals therefore reducing the usefulness of the study
  • Population validity example Q

    who is the target population? Does the sample reflect this?
  • What are the two types of external validity/reliability
    ecological validity and population validity
  • What are extraneous variables
    factors outside of the research that could change the validity of the study. if not controlled, may become confounding variable
  • What are controls
    a way to control confounding variables: to control a variable precisely to remove it as a confounded variable (to remove the factors affecting your research)
  • What does generalisable mean 

    are the results valid enough that they can be used to make assumptions about how the target population would behave
  • What part of the study is internal validity related to

    the procedure
  • What part of the study is ecological validity related to

    the task and setting
  • What part of the study is population validity related to

    the sample
  • How can the internal, ecological and population validity be improved

    internal = high control over EVs
    ecological = ensure the task and setting are realistic for Ps + what they would usually do to study natural behaviour
    population = select a sample that is representative of the target population (by including a range of people)
  • What is face validity
    refers to the extent to which something looks as if it will measure what it's supposed to measure
  • What is construct validity
    the extent to which a test measures all aspects of behaviour in question e.g driving ability - hazard perception, steering, clutch control, speed etc
  • What is criterion validity
    assesses whether a test reflects a certain set of abilities in order to predict future behaviour/refers to the extent to which the scores on one measure are able to predict the outcome on another related measure.
    it consists of two types of validity: concurrent and predictive
  • What is concurrent validity
    refers to the extent to which a test correlates well with a measure of the same thing that has been previously validated.
    to test: compare the results of your new measure with a previously validated measure e.g invention of a new test for language ability 2024 - is this similar to the test on language ability from 2005?
  • What is predictive validity
    refers to the extent to which a measure can predict future behaviour or attitude
    e.g if an IQ test from 5 years ago, predicts/is positively related to GCSE performance it would have criterion validity
  • What is face, construct, criterion, concurrent + predictive validity
    different ways to assess the validity of specific measures of behaviour
  • What is a measure of behaviour
    a specific tool that is used to assess a specific type of behaviour, such as a stress questionnaire or a personality inventory