validity

Cards (14)

  • Validity
    Asking if something is true, accurate, and can be believed
  • Questionability is always important in science, especially in psychology where there is potential for bias
  • Researchers have to carefully consider the validity of their findings by thinking about how they created their results and if their results really show something true about behavior
  • Internal validity
    Questioning if the change in the independent variable actually produced the change in the dependent variable, or if it was something else
  • External validity

    Considering if the findings can be generalized beyond the study setting and population
  • Ecological validity

    • Considering if the findings from one setting can be generalized to other settings
  • Mundane realism

    • How close the task is to real life or naturalistic behavior
  • Population validity

    • Generalizing findings from the sample to the broader population
  • Temporal validity

    • If a finding can be applied across time as society changes
  • Face validity

    If the measure looks like it's measuring what it's intending to measure
  • Criterion validity
    Matching the scores gained on a test to another standard or criteria
  • Concurrent validity

    Comparing a new test to an established test of the same thing
  • Predictive validity

    Ability to accurately predict future performance based on the results of a measure
  • How to improve validity

    1. Controlling for extraneous variables
    2. Replication in different settings and populations
    3. Using modern day replications