Observation

    Cards (35)

    • What will the video discuss regarding observation types?
      Strengths and weaknesses of each type
    • What is the definition of observation in research?
      Researchers watching and recording behaviour
    • What influences the type of observation a researcher chooses?
      The research question being investigated
    • What is a controlled observation?
      Observation in a controlled environment
    • What is an advantage of controlled observations?
      Reduces effects of extraneous variables
    • What is a major weakness of controlled observations?
      The environment may be artificial
    • What is a naturalistic observation?
      Observation in the participant's normal environment
    • What is the advantage of naturalistic observations?
      High realism and external validity
    • What is a disadvantage of naturalistic observations?
      Unknown extraneous variables may affect behaviour
    • What is an overt observation?
      Participants know they are being observed
    • Why is informed consent important in overt observations?
      Participants must agree to take part
    • What is a weakness of overt observations?
      Participants may change their behaviour
    • What is a covert observation?
      Participants do not know they are observed
    • What is a major advantage of covert observations?
      Observes natural behaviour for more validity
    • What is a significant ethical concern with covert observations?
      Participants do not give informed consent
    • What is a participant observation?
      Researcher becomes involved in the group
    • What is an advantage of participant observations?
      Researcher gains first-hand knowledge
    • What is a disadvantage of participant observations?
      Risk of losing objectivity and bias
    • What is a non-participant observation?
      Researcher records without becoming involved
    • What is an advantage of non-participant observations?
      Increases objectivity in data collection
    • What is a disadvantage of non-participant observations?
      May miss important findings from distance
    • What are operationalised behavioural categories?
      • Clearly defining a variable
      • Allows for objective measurement
      • Example: recording specific aggressive actions
    • What does it mean to operationalise a behaviour?
      To clearly define a variable for measurement
    • Why is it important to have clear behavioural categories?
      To objectively measure specific behaviours
    • What is time sampling?
      Recording behaviour at set time intervals
    • What is a disadvantage of time sampling?
      Important behaviour may be missed
    • What is event sampling?
      Recording all behaviour from a list
    • What is a disadvantage 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 indicates reliable results?
      A correlation of 0.8 or higher
    • What are the strengths and weaknesses of different observation types?
      Strengths:
      • Controlled observations reduce extraneous variables
      • Naturalistic observations provide high realism
      • Participant observations offer first-hand insights
      • Non-participant observations increase objectivity

      Weaknesses:
      • Controlled observations may lack ecological validity
      • Naturalistic observations have unknown variables
      • Participant observations risk researcher bias
      • Non-participant observations may miss important data
    • What resources are available on psych boost for patrons?
      Printable resources and tutorial videos
    • Why is support from patrons important for psych boost?
      It allows for part-time teaching and content creation
    • What will the next video cover?
      Self-reports in research methods
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