observational designs + techniques

    Cards (24)

    • types of observational designs:
      • nautralistic/controlled
      • covert/overt
      • participant/non participant
    • naturalistic observational design:
      • takes place in setting where target behaviour would usually occur
      • all aspects of environment are free to vary
    • controlled observational design:
      • structured environment
      • some control over variables - manipulation of variables to observe effects + control of CVs + EVs
    • naturalistic strengths + weaknesses:
      • high external validity
      • lack of control makes replication difficult
      • uncontrolled EVs + CVs make it difficult to judge patterns of behaviour
    • controlled strengths + weaknesses:
      • higher control of EVs + CVs
      • replication becomes easier
      • low external validity
    • covert observational design:
      • participants unaware they are being observed
      • consent has not been obtained, behaviour must be already happening
    • overt observational design:
      • aware they are being observed, given informed consent
    • covert strengths + weaknesses:
      • removes demand characteristics
      • high internal validity so behaviour is natural
      • ethics - privacy + lack of consent
    • overt strengths + weaknesses:
      • more ethical

      • more likely to change behaviour due to known observation
    • participant observational design:
      • researcher becomes part of group theyre studying
    • non participant observational design:
      • researcher remains separate
      • recorded more objectively
      • may be impractical/impossible to join certain groups
    • participants strengths + weaknesses:
      • can experience situation - greater insight
      • increased external validity

      • may lose objectivity if they identify strongly to people they are studying
    • non participant strengths + weaknesses:
      • objective + psychological distance
      • less likely to affect group dynamic
      • may lose valuable insight - too far removed
    • limitations of observational method (observer bias):
      • interpretations affected by expectations
      • issue when there is mainly one researcher - using >1 observer improves reliability
      • assessed through inter rate reliability
    • limitations of observational method (cant demonstrate casual relationships):
      • not directly measuring effect of IV on DV
    • observational design:
      • unstructured/structured
      • behavioural categories
      • sampling methods
    • unstructured design:
      • writes everything happening
      • appropriate when small scale observation conducted
    • structured design:
      • target behaviours are simplified
      • use of behavioural categories + sampling methods
    • behavioural categories:
      • target behaviour broken up into components that are observable + measurable (operationalisation)
      • all observers need to interpret same behavioural category in same way - must be operationalised, objective + not overlapping
      • before observation =researchers must include ways in which target behaviour may occur (behaviour checklist)
    • sampling in observational studies:
      • unstructured: continuous recording
      • structured: systematic way of sampling
    • event sampling:
      • researcher records each time target behaviour occurs
      • useful when target behaviour occurs infrequently
    • time sampling:
      • records behaviour at a fixed time frame - decreases amount of observations made
      • instances when behaviour is sampled may be unrepresentative of observation as a whole
    • unstructured strengths + weaknesses:
      • rich detailed data - qualitative
      • greater risk of observer bias - what catches eye
      • unsuitable for large samples
    • structured strengths+ weaknesses:
      • recording is easier + more systematic
      • quantitative data - analysis is easier

      • less detail
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