year 13 psychology research methods

    Cards (110)

    • reliability
      the consistency of measurements
      we would expect any measurement to produce the same data if taken on successive occasions
    • what should an observation produce if its reliable
      the first and second observer should have the same or similar observations
    • what is a good way to asses accuracy in observations 

      have 2 or more observers making separate recordings and then compare them
    • what is inter observer reliability
      the extent to which there is agreement between two or more observers involved on observations of a behaviour
    • how can you improve scores for inter rater reliability
      operationalise behavioural categories to make them clearer
      train observers as they may need to practise using behavioural categories to respond quickly
    • how is the agreement between workers calculated 

      using the correlation coefficient / plotting a graph with both observers on (observer a on one axis and observer b on the other )
    • why is it important to have reliability in self report techniques like questionnaires 

      we need to know whether results e.g of a happiness test differ per week due to the person or the test ( if the test is unreliable or not )
    • what is test-re-test used for 

      used to asses the reliability of a psychological test to other self report measure
    • what is test re test
      when the test designer gives the test to a group of people and then gives the same people the test to take a second time - leaving a short interval
    • how do you know if your test is reliable when using test re test
      if the outcome is the same both times
    • how could you see the reliability of interviewers
      compare the answers of one interviewer on one occasion with the answers of the same interviewer a week later
    • what could low reliability in a psychological test be caused by 

      ambiguous test items causing people to give different answers
    • how can you improve low reliability in psychological tests
      re examine questions and re write them to reduce ambiguity
    • what could reliability in an experiment be concerned with 

      with whether the method used to measure the dependent variable is consistent eg the observations or self report method
    • what is another aspect of reliability in experiments
      the procedure - it is important that it is the same each time for each participant
    • why is it important to keep the procedure the same 

      so we can compare the results and performance of participants
    • how can you keep the procedure the same 

      standardise the procedure
    • what should a researcher do if they want to repeat someones experiment
      use the same set of standardised procedure
    • what is validity
      refers to whether an observed effect is a genuine one
    • internal validity
      concerns about what goes on within a study
    • external validity
      concerns about what goes on after the study - concerns generalising the findings to other people times and settings
    • examples of internal validity
      investigator effets
      demand characteristics
      confounding variables
      social desirability bias
      poorly operationalised behavioural categories
    • investigator effects
      anything the investigator does that had an affect on the participants performance other than what was intended
    • demand characteristics
      cues that inadvertently communicate the aims of the study to participants
    • confounding variables
      a variable in an experiment that caries systematically with the IV and therefore conclusions can't be drawn about what caused changes in DV
    • Social desirability bias
      the tendency for participants to provide answers that don't refelct reality as people prefer to show themselves in a good light
    • poorly operationalised behavioural categories
      observers cant record reality as the categories aren't clear
    • types of external validity
      population - generalising to other people
      temporal - generalising to other historical periods
      ecological - generalising to other settings
    • ecological validity
      being able to generalise findings from one study to other situations and to every day life
    • what do we need to consider when determining the ecological validity of a natural experiment
      the DV - we need to consider the method used to asses the DV and whether this e.g iq tests are done in an artificial way
    • what do we need to consider when determining the ecological validity of a field experiment
      the task used to measure the DV
    • what questions can you ask when trying to determine ecological validity of a study 

      what environment was the study conducted in (less about this more about the other questions )
      how was the DV measure
      were the participant aware their behaviour was being studied
    • what is mundane realism
      refers to how a study mirrors the real world
    • what is face validity
      the extent to which test items look like hat the test claims to measure
      face validity only requires an intuitive measure
    • what is concurrent validity
      a means of establishing validity by comparing and existing test or questionnaire with the one you are interested in
    • how do you use concurrent validity
      by giving participants both measures at the same time and then their scores are compared
    • what would show there is concurrent validity in the current questionnaire 

      if people get similar scores on both measurements
    • how can you improve face validity
      revise the questions so they relate more obviously to the topic
    • how can you improve concurrent validity
      remove questions which may seem irrelevant and try checking the concurrent validity again
    • how can you improve internal and external validity
      improve research design - use a double blind experiment to prevent participants guessing researchers aims