observation

Cards (35)

  • What will the video discuss regarding observation types?
    Various observation types and their strengths and weaknesses
  • What is the definition of observation in research?
    Researchers watching and recording behaviour as it happens
  • What are the two main types of observation researchers can choose from?
    Controlled and naturalistic observation
  • What is a controlled observation?
    Participants are observed in a controlled environment
  • What is a key advantage of controlled observations?
    Reduces effects of extraneous variables
  • What is a significant weakness of controlled observations?
    The environment may be artificial
  • What is a naturalistic observation?
    Participants are observed in their normal environment
  • What is a key advantage of naturalistic observations?
    High realism and external validity
  • What is a significant weakness of naturalistic observations?
    Unknown extraneous variables may affect behavior
  • What is the difference between overt and covert observation?
    Overt means participants know they are observed
  • What is a key ethical consideration in overt observation?
    Participants must give informed consent
  • What is a weakness of overt observation?
    Participants may change their behavior
  • What is a covert observation?
    Participants do not know they are being observed
  • What is a key advantage of covert observation?
    Observes natural behavior without bias
  • What is a significant ethical concern with covert observation?
    Participants do not give informed consent
  • What are the two types of participant observation?
    Participant and non-participant observation
  • What is a participant observation?
    Researcher becomes involved in the group studied
  • What is an advantage of participant observation?
    Gains first-hand knowledge of participants' situation
  • What is a risk of participant observation?
    Researcher may lose objectivity and become biased
  • What is a non-participant observation?
    Researcher observes without becoming part of the group
  • What is an advantage of non-participant observation?
    Increases objectivity in observations
  • What is a weakness of non-participant observation?
    May miss important findings due to distance
  • What are operationalized behavioral categories?
    • Clearly defining a variable
    • Allows for objective measurement
    • Example: recording specific aggressive actions
  • Why is it important to operationalize behavior in observations?
    To objectively measure the target behavior
  • What is time sampling in observational research?
    Recording behavior at set time intervals
  • What is event sampling in observational research?
    Recording all behavior from defined categories
  • What is a limitation of time sampling?
    Important behavior may be missed outside intervals
  • What is a limitation of event sampling?
    May require many observers for accuracy
  • What is inter-rater reliability?
    Agreement between two researchers' observations
  • How is inter-rater reliability tested?
    Using two researchers with the same categories
  • What correlation value do researchers expect for reliable results?
    A correlation of 0.8 or higher
  • What resources are available for research methods study?
    • 6 tutorial videos on AS and A-level research methods
    • Worked examples for every question
    • Over a hundred printable resources
  • What is the website mentioned for additional resources?
    psychboost.com
  • Who supported the development of the research methods unit?
    Students and teachers on Patreon
  • What is the next topic mentioned in the video series?
    Self-reports