observation techniques

Cards (21)

  • covert
    unaware of being observed
  • overt
    aware of being observed
  • covert
    :) realistic behavior = high internal + external validity
    :( ethical issues = lack of informed consent
    :( hard to record data (need CCTV/from a far distance) = less detailed info
  • internal validity
    whether the study, conduct + analysis answers the research questions without bias
  • external validity
    whether the findings can be generalised to other contexts
  • overt
    :) less ethical issues (consent + right to withdraw)
    :) easier to record data
    :( demand characteristics = lower internal validity
  • controlled
    = manipulated environment
  • naturalistic
    = natural behavior in a natural setting
  • controlled
    :) higher control over variables
    :) higher replicability
    :( less realistic behavior - demand characteristics
  • naturalistic
    :) more realistic behaviour - higher internal + external validity
    :) allowed to study behaviour that may be seen as unethical in a lab
    :( low replicability (maybe)
    :( lack of control over variables
  • participant
    =observer is part of the observation
  • non-participant
    =observing from a distance
  • participant
    :) more in-depth info from being involved
    :) unique insight to behaviours not available to outsiders
    :( can become too involved with ps = bias
  • non-participant
    :) remains objective (no bias)
    :) easier to record data
    :( less in depth info as an outsider
    :( more likely to misinterpret behaviour
  • structured
    :) more objective measurements of behavior = less bias
    :( less realistic behaviour in controlled settings
    :( more likely to miss unanticipated behaviour
  • unstructured
    :) realistic behaviour = high internal validity
    :( low replicability = unique
    :( difficult to record data (missed info)
  • time sampling
    = observations occur at specific time intervals (first 10secs of every minute)
  • event sampling
    = observations based on previously decided behavioural events/categories and noted when they occur
  • behavioural categories
    = list of specific behaviours the researcher is focused on. they must be operationalised, unambiguous, not overlapping and observable.
    -noted with a tally or checklist
  • primary data
    = collected first hand by the researcher or researcher's team
  • secondary data
    = has been collected by others, including meta-analysis which looks at a collection of various studies