self-report

    Cards (31)

    • self report
      asking a participant about their thoughts and behaviours and recording their answers
    • self reports can be used as part of an experiment as a way of measuring the dependent variable (DV), self reports can also be used as part of a correlation, as a way of measuring one (or both) of the co-variables
    • 2 main types of self-report methods
      questionnaires, interviews
    • questionnaires
      a series of questions in a written form/computer
    • interviews
      a series of questions given verbally, face to face/ or by telephone between an interviewer and an interviewee
    • rating scale - ordinal data 

      a simple numerical scale on which a participant can indicate the extent or strength of some measure
    • strengths of rating scales:
      • easy for participants to respond to - large amounts of data can be collected, reliable and more generalisable if wide sample is found
      • produces quantitative data - easy to analyse
      • can be tested for reliability - improved by changing or removing unreliable items
      • validity can be improved by reversing some items to reduce response bias
    • weaknesses of rating scales:
      • produce quantitative data - lacks detail so participants cannot express opinions fully, reducing validity
      • risk of response bias - consistently giving answers in the middle or one extreme end
      • points on the scale are only relative (ordinal data)
      • cannot be used to measure complex variables that require more than a simple numerical responses
    • likert scales
      type of question that measures attitudes - begins with a statement and asks the participant to respond to that statement by saying how much they agree with it
    • strengths of likert scales:
      • easy for participants to respond to - large amounts of data can be collected, reliable and more generalisable if wide sample is found
      • produces quantitative data - easy to analyse
      • can be tested for reliability - improved by changing or removing unreliable items
      • allow the measurement of more complex attitudes than rating scales
      • validity can be improved by reversing some items to reduce response bias with several uses
    • weaknesses of likert scales:
      • produce quantitative data - lacks detail so participants cannot express opinions fully, reducing validity
      • risk of response bias - consistently giving answers in the middle or one extreme end
      • points on the scale are only relative (ordinal data)
      • meaning of the middle value is ambiguous, could indicate no opinion or undecided
    • semantic differentials
      participants' rate their response between an opposing pair of descriptive words such as weak and strong or honest and dishonest
    • strengths of semantic differentials
      • reduces the chance of people going to the middle - most people pick 5 or 7 rather than going to an extreme end
    • open questions
      allow participants to give full & detailed answers in their own words
    • strengths of open questions:
      • produce qualitative data - provides detail, participants can express opinions fully, raising validity
      • analysis retains detail of participants' answers, so information, such as variation in responses, is not 'lost' through averaging
    • weaknesses of open questions
      • produce qualitative data - time consuming to analyse as themes need to be identified and extracted
      • interpretation of qualitative data can be subjective - leading to bias from individual researchers and potentially reducing inter-rater reliability
      • findings are individual so less generalisable
    • closed questions
      offer a small number of explicitly stated alternative responses and no opportunity to expand on answers
    • strengths of closed questions
      • easy for participants to respond to - large amounts of data can be collected quickly, making data more reliable and a wide sample is more generalisable
      • produce quantitative data which are easy to analyse - find modes, medians and to plot graphs using data from many questions
    • weaknesses of closed questions
      • only produces quantitative data - lack detail and meaning so participants cannot express opinions fully, lowers validity
      • risk of response biases such as consistently saying yes
      • score for all participants on each question is only a total (nominal data) - data can only be used to calculate a mode
    • filler questions
      questions that are not used in the analysis - there to disguise the true purpose of the questionnaire, reducing demand characteristics
    • lie detector questions
      included to try identify participants whose responses reflect a social desirability bias
    • structured interviews
      predetermined questions in a fixed order - predominately closed questions, likely scripted so that they are standardised
    • strengths of structured interviews
      • replicability - easy to replicate as fixed set of closed questions are used (easy to quantify)
      • analysing/comparing results - easy to analyse due to fixed questions/quantitative data
      • reliability - all participants are answering the same questions, standardised
    • weaknesses of structured interviews
      • flexibility - not flexible as new questions cannot be asked, structure is followed
      • detail of answers are limited - closed questions so no room for expansion of answers
      • internal validity is limited - no ability to expand/follow up so responses may be ambiguous/lack detail
    • semi-structured interviews
      uses a fixed list of open and closed questions - the interviewer can introduce additional questions if required
    • strengths of semi-structured interviews
      • analysing/comparing results - quantitative data, easy to analyse
      • flexible as questions can be adapted/changed depending on answers
      • internal validity is good as it can probe for deeper understanding/clarification
      • detail of answers is moderate/good detail due to parts allowing expansion/follow up
    • weaknesses of semi-structured interviews
      • replicability - difficult to replicate as only partial structure is used
      • analysing/comparing results - qualitative data is time consuming to analyse
      • reliability is limited as some consistency with closed questions, open questions hard to replicate (lack standardisation)
    • unstructured interviews
      generally begins with a standard question for all participants, but from there on, questions depend on the respondents answers
    • strengths of unstructured interviews
      • detail of answers is rich in detail due to open questions and ability to follow up/expand
      • flexible - questions can be adapted/changed depending on answers
      • internal validity is good as can probe for deeper understanding/clarification
    • weaknesses of unstructured interviews
      • hard to replicate - no structure
      • time consuming to analyse qualitative data - looking for themes and difficult to compare
      • less reliable as open questions that deviate from schedule are hard to repeat (not standardised)
    • interviewer/researcher bias
      the appearance or behaviour of the interviewer may influence the answers of the respondent - this can bias the results of a study and make them invalid.
      the gender, ethnicity, body language, age and social status of the interviewer can all create an interviewer effect
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