observations

Cards (10)

  • techniques - naturalistic observation
    watching and recording natural situation where researcher doesn't influence situation of participants in any way - aims to record real life behaviour e.g. watching infants play in nursery
    strengths - high ecological validity - low demand characteristics
    weaknesses - low internal validity - difficult to replicate
  • techniques - controlled observation
    watching and recording behaviour in environment which has been regulated and controlled by researcher (e.g. in laboratory) - allows researcher to test specific situations whilst also reducing influence of extraneous variables
    strengths - high control (internal validity) - easy to replicate
    weaknesses - low ecological validity - high demand characteristics
  • overt observations

    when participants are made aware their behaviour is being watched and recorded regardless of setting - as awareness often impacts how naturally participants behave observers try to be as unobtrusive as possible
    strength - ethical (can observe in non public places)
    weakness - high demand characteristics
  • covert observations 

    when participants aren't made aware their behaviour is being watched and recorded - in a covert observation participants won't have given informed consent to take part - behaviour observed in secret like a balcony or hidden camera
    strength - low demand characteristics
    weakness - lack of informed consent
  • non participant observations

    when researcher remains separate from people they are studying and record behaviour in a more objective manner - observer watches behaviour from a distance and doesn't interact with people being observed - more common than participant observations because it may be impractical or impossible to join particular groups
    strength - low investigator effects
    weakness - lack of first hand insight
  • participant observations 

    when observer is part of the group being observed - observer watches behaviour fro within the social situation being studied acting as one of the group and interacting with group being observed (may effect objectivity) e.g. joining a criminal gang
    strength - gives first hand insight into behaviour
    weakness - suffers from investigator effects
  • observer bias
    when observers expectations influence what the researcher sees or hears or the data they record - makes observation less objective and reduces the internal validity of the findings
  • design - event sampling
    involves continuously watching a certain behaviour and counting the number of times that event occurs in a target group or individual - ensures no behaviours are missed and generates a great deal of data for analysis
    strength - doesn't overlook important behaviours
    weakness - might suffer from observer bias
  • design - time sampling 

    involves watching and recording behaviour at specific time intervals - e.g. recording what the target individual or group are doing every 30 seconds or every minute
    strength - reduces observer bias
    weakness - might overlook important behaviours
  • behavioural categories

    dividing target behaviour like stress into a subset of specific, observable behaviours - e.g. affection broken down into 'hugging' 'kissing' and 'holding hands'