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Psychology
Research Methods (ALL)
Observational Techniques (types)
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Created by
Sophia Kirkwood
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Cards (11)
Define covert observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Undisclosed, ppt is
not
aware
(+) Investigator effects and
demand characteristics
=
less
likely
(-)
Lack
of
informed consent
=
less
ethical
Define overt observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Ppt is
aware
(+) Informed
consent
obtained = more
ethical
(-)
Investigator
effects and
demand characteristics
=
more
likely
Define participant observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Researcher
takes
part
(close proximity)
(+) Close proximity =
in depth
data gathered
(-)
Investigator
effects and
demand characteristics
=
more
likely
Define non-participant observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Researcher
does
not
take
part
(not close proximity)
(+)
Investigator
effects and
demand characteristics
=
less
likely
(-)
Lack
of proximity = researcher might
miss
behaviours
of
interest
Define naturalistic observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Takes place in
naturalistic
(unaltered) setting
(+)
Higher
level of
ecological
validity
(-) Issues with
replication
and
ascertaining
reliability
Define controlled observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Takes place in
artificial
(controlled) environment
(+) Can be
replicated
to
check
reliability
(-)
Lower
levels of
ecological
validity
Define structured observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Behaviour is
coded
using
behavioural categories
(+)
Higher
levels of
inter-observer
reliability
(-)
Less
rich
data can lack
internal
validity as researchers
miss important behaviours
Define unstructured observation and give a strength and weakness of it
Every
instance of
behaviour
is
recorded
and
described
(+)
Rich
data = greater
internal
validity
(-)
Lower
levels of
inter-observer
reliability
Give the names of the multiple observational techniques
Covert
,
Overt
,
Participant
,
Non-participant
,
Naturalistic
,
Controlled
,
Structured
,
Unstructured
Define time sampling
This is where an observer records behaviour at prescribed intervals e.g. every 10 seconds
(+) Allow for a better use of time since fewer observations are made.
(-) Not every behaviour of relevance to the investigation will be counted if it occurs in between the time frames allocated.
Define event sampling
Where an observer records the number of times that the target behaviour occurs e.g. using a tally
(+) Every behaviour of interest to the researcher will be counted from the beginning to the end of the observation
(-) Possibility that some behaviours could be missed if there is too much happening at the same time, resulting in some not being coded.