100% de satisfacción garantizada Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Tanto en línea como en PDF No estas atado a nada 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Resumen

Samenvatting Research methods and Techniques 2

Puntuación
-
Vendido
2
Páginas
129
Subido en
28-02-2025
Escrito en
2024/2025

This document serves as a continuously updated summary of the course "Research Methods and Techniques 2." It includes key points from lectures, insights from the textbook, and additional relevant information found through independent research.

Mostrar más Leer menos
Institución
Grado











Ups! No podemos cargar tu documento ahora. Inténtalo de nuevo o contacta con soporte.

Libro relacionado

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
Estudio
Grado

Información del documento

¿Un libro?
Subido en
28 de febrero de 2025
Archivo actualizado en
5 de mayo de 2025
Número de páginas
129
Escrito en
2024/2025
Tipo
Resumen

Temas

Vista previa del contenido

Table of Contents
1 Research Methods and Techniques – Practical Information................7
1.1 Language of Instruction.............................................................7
1.2 Course Modules.........................................................................8
1.3 Instructor Team.........................................................................8
1.4 Lecture Schedule & Topics..........................................................8
1.5 Participation & Group Registration.............................................8
1.6 Practical Sessions......................................................................8
1.7 Required Materials.....................................................................9
1.8 Assessment & Evaluation...........................................................9
2 Psychology Is a Way of Thinking.....................................................10
2.1 Producing Versus Consuming Research.....................................10
2.2 How Scientists Work................................................................11
2.2.1 Key Principles of Scientific Practice..................................................................11
2.3 Empiricism...............................................................................12
2.4 Scientists Test Theories...........................................................12
2.4.1 Theory-Data Cycle...........................................................................................12
2.4.2 Exploratory (Inductive) vs. Confirmatory (Deductive) Research......................15
2.4.3 Characteristics of Good Theories.....................................................................15
2.5 Scientists Form a Community....................................................15
2.6 Fundamental Versus Applied Research......................................16
2.7 Continuously Evolving Science..................................................16
2.8 Publishing in Science................................................................16
3 Sources of Information..................................................................17
3.1 Researchers and Their Methods................................................18
3.2 Research Versus Experience.....................................................18
3.3 Research Versus Intuition.........................................................19
3.4 Authority Figures.....................................................................19
3.5 Scientific Sources.....................................................................19
3.5.1 Breakdown of the Diagram:.............................................................................20
3.6 Hierarchy of Evidence...............................................................22
4 Three Claims, Four Validities..........................................................23
4.1 Variables: Descriptions and Definitions.....................................23
4.2 The Three Types of Research Claims.........................................24
4.2.1 Frequency Claims............................................................................................ 24
4.2.2 Association Claims........................................................................................... 24
4.2.3 Causal Claims..................................................................................................25
4.3 The Four Big Validities.............................................................25
4.4 Applying Validity to Different Research Claims..........................26



pg. 1

, 4.5 Conditions for Causality...........................................................27
4.6 Spurious Associations and Balancing Validity............................28
4.7 correllation does not equal caustion..........................................28
5 Ethical Guidelines for Psychology Research.....................................29
5.1 Historical Ethical Violations in Research....................................29
5.1.1 The Tuskegee Syphilis Study (1932-1972).......................................................29
5.1.2 Milgram’s Obedience Experiment (1961).........................................................29
5.1.3 1.3 Invasion of Personal Space........................................................................29
5.2 The Belmont Report: Ethical Principles in Research....................30
5.2.1 Three Core Ethical Principles:..........................................................................30
5.3 APA Ethical Guidelines in Psychology........................................30
5.3.1 Five General APA Principles.............................................................................30
5.3.2 APA guidelines - Standard 8:............................................................................30
6 Identifying Good Measurement......................................................35
6.1 Ways to Measure a Variable......................................................35
6.1.1 Example: Measuring Stress in Students During Exams....................................35
6.2 Construct vs. Operational Definitions........................................35
6.2.1 Conceptual vs. Operationalization...................................................................35
6.2.2 Choosing the Right Operationalization.............................................................36
6.3 Reliability and Construct Validity..............................................36
6.3.1 Construct Validity............................................................................................ 36
6.3.2 Reliability: Measuring Consistency...................................................................37
6.3.3 Types of Reliability:......................................................................................... 38
6.3.4 Evaluating Reliability and Validity in Research................................................38
7 Surveys and Observations in Research Methods..............................40
7.1 Surveys...................................................................................40
7.1.1 Types of Surveys............................................................................................. 40
7.2 Experience Sampling Methods (ESM).........................................41
7.3 Single- vs. Multi-Item Measures................................................41
7.4 scales......................................................................................42
7.5 Choosing the Question Format..................................................42
7.5.1 Likert Rating Scale...........................................................................................42
7.5.2 Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)............................................................................42
7.5.3 Semantic Differential Scale..............................................................................42
7.5.4 Guttman Scale.................................................................................................43
7.5.5 Writing Well-Written Questions........................................................................43
7.5.6 Encouraging Accurate Responses....................................................................43
7.5.7 Observations in Research................................................................................44
8 Sampling.......................................................................................45
8.1 Sampling Concepts and Key Terms............................................45
8.2 Key issue.................................................................................46
8.2.1 Generalizability & External Validity..................................................................46
8.3 Sampling Bias..........................................................................47
8.3.1 Key Concepts................................................................................................... 47
8.3.2 Ways a Sample May Be Biased........................................................................48
8.4 Margin of Error........................................................................48



pg. 2

, 8.4.1 What Is Margin of Error?..................................................................................48
8.4.2 Margin of Error by Sample Size........................................................................49
8.5 Sampling Techniques...............................................................49
8.5.1 Population of Interest......................................................................................49
8.5.2 Representative Sampling.................................................................................49
8.5.3 Biased Sampling..............................................................................................49
8.5.4 Biased vs Unbiased Sampling Techniques.......................................................49
8.6 Probability Sampling................................................................50
8.6.1 Types of Probability Sampling..........................................................................50
8.6.2 Biased sampling.............................................................................................. 54
8.6.3 Types of Biased Sampling................................................................................54
8.7 External Validity......................................................................58
8.8 WEIRD Samples........................................................................58
8.9 Online Paid Panels...................................................................59
8.10 Sample Size...........................................................................59
8.11 Response Rate.......................................................................60
8.12 Response Rates (Advanced)....................................................60
8.12.1 General Trends Over Time.............................................................................60
8.12.2 Detailed Findings by Holtom et al..................................................................60
8.12.3 From Anseel et al. (2010).............................................................................61
9 Bivariate correlational research.....................................................61
9.1 Three examples.......................................................................61
9.1.1 Study 1: Mehl et al. (2010) – Eavesdropping on Happiness.............................61
9.1.2 Study 2: Cacioppo et al. (2013) – Online Dating and Relationship Satisfaction 62
9.1.3 Study 3: Siddarth et al. (2018) – Sitting Time and Brain Structure..................63
9.1.4 Cross-Study Comparison & Takeaways...........................................................63
9.1.5 Final Reflections.............................................................................................64
9.2 Bivariate Correlational Research Explained................................64
9.2.1 What Is It?....................................................................................................... 64
9.2.2 Case Example: Cacioppo et al. (2013)............................................................64
9.3 Statistical Validity in Bivariate Correlational Research...............65
9.3.1 What is the Effect Size?...................................................................................66
9.3.2 How Accurate is the Effect Estimate?..............................................................66
9.3.3 Is the Effect Statistically Significant?..............................................................66
9.3.4 Has the Effect Been Replicated?......................................................................66
9.3.5 Do Outliers Influence the Estimate?.................................................................66
9.3.6 Is There Range Restriction?............................................................................67
9.3.7 Is the Relationship Linear?...............................................................................67
9.3.8 Summary Checklist: Ensuring Statistical Validity............................................67
9.4 Internal Validity in Bivariate Correlational Research..................67
9.4.1 Criteria for Causal Inference............................................................................67
9.4.2 Summary Takeaway........................................................................................68
9.5 External Validity in Bivariate Correlational Research..................69
9.5.1 How was the sample selected?........................................................................69
9.5.2 To which population are they trying to generalize?.........................................69
9.5.3 Is external validity important when investigating relationships?.....................69
9.5.4 The Role of Moderators....................................................................................69
9.5.5 Summary Table............................................................................................... 69
9.5.6 Summary Takeaway........................................................................................70
9.6 Moderators in Bivariate Correlational Research.........................70



pg. 3

, 9.6.1 What Is a Moderator?.......................................................................................70
9.6.2 Summary Table.............................................................................................. 71
10 Multivariate correlational research...............................................72
10.1 Criteria for Causality in Multivariate Correlational Research.....72
10.1.1 Final Takeaway............................................................................................. 73
10.2 Longitudinal Designs in Multivariate Correlational Research.....73
10.2.1 What Is a Longitudinal Design?.....................................................................73
10.2.2 Case Study.................................................................................................... 74
10.2.3 Longitudinal Designs vs. Causality Criteria....................................................74
10.2.4 Why Use Longitudinal Design (vs. Experiments)?..........................................74
10.2.5 Summary: Interpreting Longitudinal Paths...................................................75
10.3 Multiple Regression — Ruling Out Third Variables....................75
10.4 Core Concepts........................................................................75
10.4.1 Case Examples.............................................................................................. 75
10.4.2 Summary: What Does Regression Offer?.......................................................77
10.4.3 Summary of Multiple Regression Strengths...................................................77
10.5 Can Multiple Regression Prove Causality?................................77
10.5.1 Popular Misinterpretations in Media..............................................................77
10.5.2 Patterns and Parsimony: Example of Smoking and Cancer...........................78
10.5.3 Key Concepts Explained................................................................................78
10.6 Mediation, Moderation & Confounding: Understanding Variable
Relationships in Research..............................................................78
10.6.1 What is Mediation?........................................................................................79
10.6.2 Mediator vs. Confounder................................................................................79
10.6.3 Mediator vs. Moderator..................................................................................79
10.6.4 Mediation, Moderation, and Third-variable Summary Chart...........................79
10.7 Controlling for Confounders: Ensuring Valid Causal Inference...80
10.7.1 Methods to Control for Confounding..............................................................80
10.7.2 Summary: Why Control Confounders?...........................................................81
11 Simple experimental research......................................................81
11.1 Two Real-World Examples.......................................................81
11.1.1 Summary Comparison: Experimental Design & Insights................................82
11.2 Experimental Variables...........................................................83
11.2.1 Independent Variable (IV)..............................................................................83
11.2.2 Dependent Variable (DV)...............................................................................83
11.2.3 Control Variables...........................................................................................83
11.2.4 Critical Principle............................................................................................. 83
11.2.5 Summary....................................................................................................... 83
11.3 Potential Outcomes Framework & Average Treatment Effect
(ATE)............................................................................................84
11.3.1 What is the Causal Effect?.............................................................................84
11.3.2 How Is the ATE Measured?.............................................................................84
11.3.3 Why This Works:............................................................................................ 84
11.3.4 Interpretation:............................................................................................... 84
11.3.5 Key Benefits of the ATE Framework...............................................................84
11.3.6 Final Summary...............................................................................................85
11.4 Establishing Causality in Experiments.....................................85
11.4.1 Covariance..................................................................................................... 85
11.4.2 Temporal Precedence....................................................................................85
11.4.3 Ruling Out Alternative Explanations..............................................................85
11.4.4 Systematic vs. Non-Systematic Variance.......................................................86



pg. 4
$9.07
Accede al documento completo:

100% de satisfacción garantizada
Inmediatamente disponible después del pago
Tanto en línea como en PDF
No estas atado a nada

Conoce al vendedor
Seller avatar
paulinevastenaekel
1.0
(1)

Conoce al vendedor

Seller avatar
paulinevastenaekel Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Seguir Necesitas iniciar sesión para seguir a otros usuarios o asignaturas
Vendido
8
Miembro desde
3 año
Número de seguidores
0
Documentos
8
Última venta
3 meses hace

1.0

1 reseñas

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
1

Recientemente visto por ti

Por qué los estudiantes eligen Stuvia

Creado por compañeros estudiantes, verificado por reseñas

Calidad en la que puedes confiar: escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron y evaluado por otros que han usado estos resúmenes.

¿No estás satisfecho? Elige otro documento

¡No te preocupes! Puedes elegir directamente otro documento que se ajuste mejor a lo que buscas.

Paga como quieras, empieza a estudiar al instante

Sin suscripción, sin compromisos. Paga como estés acostumbrado con tarjeta de crédito y descarga tu documento PDF inmediatamente.

Student with book image

“Comprado, descargado y aprobado. Así de fácil puede ser.”

Alisha Student

Preguntas frecuentes