Methodologies

    Cards (14)

    • What are CAT scans?
      • Uses structural neuroimaging
      • A series of x-ray scans from different locations around the head
      • X-rays pass through tissue of different densities at different rates
      • Images are combined to create a structure of the brain
      • Low resolution image but can visualise major structural changes
      • High contrast dye can be injected to highlight different areas of the brain
    • What are structural MRI scans?
      • Uses structural neuroimaging
      • Uses detection of radio frequency signals produced by displaced radio waves in a magnetic field. It provides an anatomical view of the brain
      • Hydrogen atoms in the brain respond to the magnetic field by emitting energy
      • MRI machines use the energy signals to construct an image
    • What are functional MRI scans?
      • Uses functional neuroimaging
      • Measures blood flow in the brain when a person performs a task
      • Works on the premise that neurons in the brain that are most active during a task use the most energy
    • What are PET scans?
      • Uses functional neuroimaging
      • Radioactive material is injected/inhaled and flows through the bloodstream to the brain
      • Oxygen and glucose accumulate in areas of the brain which are active
      • The use of glucose breaks down radioactive materials which gives off a neutron and a positron
      • The positron hits an electron which then releases gamma rays
      • These gamma rays are detected to identify the brain activity
    • What are longitudinal studies?
      A prospective observational study conducted over a set period of time where data is collected periodically.
    • What are the features of a longitudinal study?
      • Often a repeated measures design where participants are assessed on two or more occasions as they get older
      • Not all longitudinal studies are experimental
      • Sample may be of all the same age/starting an activity at the same time
      • Data is taken over several test points, including at the start (baseline data) and at the end (final test point)
      • These tests could be observations, interviews etc
      • EXAMPLE: Kohlberg's study of moral development
    • What are cross-sectional studies?
      Studies which compare different population groups at the same point in time.
    • What are the features of a cross=sectional study?
      • Like a snapshot of behaviour
      • One group of participants representing one section of society are compared with participants from another group
      • This study may use several groups of participants who are at different points in time e.g. a group just starting therapy and a group who are halfway through therapy
    • What are the advantages of using brain scans?
      • Reliability - uses scientific material, higher accuracy
      • Qualitative data - uses structural and functional neuroimaging, more detail and better quality
      • Researcher bias - no possibility for researcher bias as they have little involvement in the actual brain scan
      • Control of variables - laboratory environment, easier to control extraneous and confounding variables
    • What are the disadvantages of brain scans?
      • Ethics - risk of harm to participants, may be a stress inducing process with potential discomfort
      • Cause and effect - cannot prove any correlation or find any causation of brain differences
      • Practicality - long process with expensive equipment
      • Internal validity - only uses either structural or functional neuroimaging, not possible to have rich detail for both
    • What are the advantages of longitudinal studies?
      • Internal reliability - same method of data collection is used for each participant, standardised procedures prevents individual differences
      • Internal validity - prospective study provides rich detail, case studies are also often used in longitudinal studies
      • Cause and effect - prospective study allows cause and effect to be established better
    • What are the disadvantages of longitudinal studies?
      • Control of variables - prospective study, difficult to control variables over several occasions
      • Researcher bias - researcher has a lot of control and influence of the study
      • Sample size - difficult to assess a large number of participants over several occasions
    • What are the advantages of cross-sectional studies?
      • Sample size - highly representative as multiple groups of society are compared, increases population validity
      • Replicability - cross-sectional studies are easy to repeat to assess trends over time, increases external reliability
      • Practicality - results are obtained quickly because participants already have the condition or attribute being studied at the time of data collection
    • What are the disadvantages of cross-sectional studies?
      • Sample method - similar to independent groups design, risks individual differences between groups
      • Cause and effect - difficult to establish cause and effect as they are only a snapshot in time, doesn't include what happens before and after the snapshot
      • Sample - can be difficult to gauge a sample which is entirely representative of the population group as a whole
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