observation

    Cards (17)

    • Observation
      Researchers watching and recording behaviour as it happens
    • Types of observation

      • Controlled
      • Naturalistic
    • Controlled observation

      • Researchers control the situation the participants experience and record their behaviours
      • Done in a lab to control variables
      • Helps reduce effects of extraneous variables
      • Can repeat and get reliable results (high internal validity)
    • Naturalistic observation

      • Participants observed in their normal environment
      • High realism, participants behave naturally
      • Findings have external/ecological validity
      • Lack of control means unknown extraneous variables may cause behaviour
    • Types of observation

      • Overt
      • Covert
    • Overt observation

      • Participants can see and know they are being observed
      • Participants may change behaviour due to demand characteristics
    • Covert observation

      • Participants don't know they are being observed
      • Observes natural behaviour, higher validity
      • Unethical as participants haven't given informed consent
    • Types of observation

      • Participant
      • Non-participant
    • Participant observation

      • Researcher becomes involved in the group they are studying
      • Researcher has first-hand knowledge and may build rapport
      • Researcher risks losing objectivity and becoming biased
    • Non-participant observation

      • Researcher stands back and records the group without becoming part of it
      • Increases objectivity
      • May miss important findings by being too removed from participants
    • Operationalised behavioural categories
      Clearly defining variables to objectively measure them
    • Observational techniques

      1. Define target behaviour
      2. Create list of operationalised behavioural categories
      3. Record using frequency chart
    • Observational recording techniques

      • Time sampling
      • Event sampling
    • Time sampling
      • Record relevant behaviour at set points (e.g. 15 seconds every 10 minutes)
      • Can miss important behaviour outside recording periods
    • Event sampling

      • Record all behaviour from list of operationalised categories
      • May need multiple observers to accurately record all participants
      • May not record relevant behaviour not on list
    • Inter-rater reliability
      Using two researchers to conduct the same observation separately, then comparing their data sets to assess reliability
    • Researchers would expect a correlation of 0.8 or above to show the observation results are reliable
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