Reporting Psychological Investigations

Cards (7)

  • Sections of a Psychological Report:
    > abstract
    > introduction
    > method
    > results
    > discussion
    > referencing
  • Abstract:
    > purpose - allows the reader to gain an overview of the study, and help them decide if they want to read on
    > contains a summary of the study, covering the aims, hypotheses, method, results and conclusions
    > first part of a report
    > a single paragraph of 150-250 words
  • Introduction:
    > purpose - gives background on relevant theories and studies to explain how aims and hypotheses developed
    > contains relevant previous research, and makes it clear how the current research will add to this
    > ends with the researcher stating the aim and hypotheses of the research
  • Method:
    > purpose - provides a detailed description of what the researcher did (enough detail for replication)
    > includes sampling method and sample, procedure, equipment, ethics and design
  • Results:
    > purpose - present an overall summary of the findings to the reader, rather than reviewing the raw data
    > includes descriptive statistics - tables and graphs showing frequencies and measures of central tendency and dispersion
    > includes inferential statistics
    > for qualitative research, categories and themes are described alongside examples
  • Discussion:
    > purpose - discuss the findings and suggest possible uses and future areas of research
    > includes summary of results, a comparison with other results, limitations and modifications, and implications and future research
  • References:
    > purpose - to give details of any other articles or books that are mentioned in research so readers can locate resources, and helps avoid plagiarism
    > referencing an article - author's name, date, title of article, journal title, volume, issue, page numbers
    > referencing a book - author's last name, first initial (date), title of book, place of publication: publisher