conducting and reading research in health and human performance
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Conducting and Reading Research in Health and Human Performance. Chapter 1 The Nature and Purpose of Research. Consumer of Research Information. Advil “Nothing is proven more effective or longer lasting than Advil.” Oral-B Toothbrush - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Conducting and Reading Research Conducting and Reading Research in Health and Human Performancein Health and Human Performance
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Chapter 1Chapter 1
The Nature and Purpose of The Nature and Purpose of ResearchResearch
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Consumer of Research InformationConsumer of Research Information
Advil– “Nothing is proven more effective or longer lasting than
Advil.”
Oral-B Toothbrush– “You can buy a fancier toothbrush. But you can’t buy a
more effective one.”
Duracell Battery– “No other battery lasts longer.”
Revlon Skin Cream– “In just one week, fine dry lines and wrinkles are reduced
by over 38%.”
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Essence of a ProfessionEssence of a Profession
The pursuit of knowledge and its dissemination is a unique characteristic of a “profession”
Research is the basis for advancing the body of knowledge of a profession
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What is your vision of a What is your vision of a researcher????????researcher????????
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Research Defined Research Defined
Not really a universal definition – A structured way of answering questions, a
systematic method of inquiry– Research is nothing more or less than finding
answers to a question in a logical, orderly, and systematic fashion
Two key components– Systematic in nature– Focuses on a question of interest
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Sources of KnowledgeSources of Knowledge
Myth or tradition
Authority
Observation or personal experience
Logic or deductive reasoning
Scientific inquiry– Objective– Data Gathering– Controlled Nature
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Deductive ReasoningDeductive Reasoning
Uses logic that moves from general to specific
Model for review of literature . . . enables the researcher to organize and synthesize available information, theorize about the problem, and deduce hypotheses to be tested by the research
Categorical Syllogism– Every mammal has lungs. All rabbits are mammals.
Therefore, every rabbit has lungs.
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Inductive ReasoningInductive Reasoning
Uses logic that moves from the specific to general
Fundamental principle of scientific method . . . based upon observations of a small group, generalizations are made to a larger population
Categorical Syllogism– Every rabbit that has been observed has lungs.
Therefore, every rabbit has lungs
Imperfect vs. Perfect Induction
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The Scientific MethodThe Scientific Method
A way of solving problems and acquiring knowledge that involves both deductive and inductive reasoning in a systematic approach to obtaining information
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Stages of the Scientific MethodStages of the Scientific Method
Question Identified
Hypothesis Formed
Research Plan
Data Collected
Results Analyzed
Conclusions
New Questions Arise
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Stages of the Research ProcessStages of the Research Process
Question defined - this involves selecting the question and precisely defining the problem
Hypothesis stated – literature reviewed to provide rationale for study and basis for anticipated solution or predicted outcome
Research plan developed – methodology is developed which will permit examination of stated problem and to test hypothesis
Data are collected – the research plan is executed and the researcher will test, measure, or observe the phenomena in question in order to gather data
Results analyzed – appropriate statistical analysis is applied to the collected data in order to base a decision to confirm or refute the hypotheses (new questions often arise)
Conclusions – the findings of the research are interpreted based upon the data analysis, thus providing answer to original question
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Research and TheoryResearch and Theory
Through scientific inquiry (research), facts are discovered– The interpretation or explanation of these facts is the
basis for theory, which is a belief about how things relate to each other
– Theory is not law, but could become law through additional research and experimentation
– A theory establishes a cause and effect relationship between variables for the purpose of explaining and predicting phenomena (Best & Kahn, 1998)
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Theory in ResearchTheory in Research
Ultimate goal of science is the formation of theory based upon the synthesis and interpretation of facts and information
HHP research has often neglected theory
Greater attention should be given to the theoretical basis of research in HHP and the explanation of facts and relationships
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Types of ResearchTypes of Research
Several research classifications have been proposed– Basic vs. Applied– Quantitative vs. Qualitative– Experimental vs. Non-experimental
None of the various research categories are mutually exclusive
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Basic ResearchBasic Research
Purpose is to discover new or fundamental knowledge
Practical application is NOT a goal
Usually in highly controlled laboratory settings
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Applied ResearchApplied Research
Purpose is to find answers to practical problems
Practical in nature . . . most common in HHP
Inferences or generalizations are made to the intended population
Action Research– similar to applied research except in a local setting– very pragmatic and less controlled– no interest in generalizing findings
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Quantitative ResearchQuantitative Research
Positivist paradigm
Traditional model of research
Hypothesis directed
Based on empirical evidence
Measured with numbers
Analyzed statistically
Seeking generalizations
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Qualitative ResearchQualitative Research
Naturalistic paradigm
Descriptive in nature
Reliance on qualitative, non-numerical data
More subjective approach
Variety of methodologies– in depth interviews– direct observation
Situational specific … little generalizability
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Experimental ResearchExperimental Research
The purpose of experimental research is to investigate cause-and-effect relationships by manipulating certain variables to determine their effect on another variable – attempts to establish causality– manipulation of independent variable– control of extraneous variables is vital – often uses a control group– often uses randomization procedures– major limitation is often unnatural environment, thus
limiting generalizability
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Non-Experimental ResearchNon-Experimental Research
Tends to observe, analyze, and describe what exists rather than manipulating the variable under study
Lack of control is often cited as a limitation
Various types common in HHP– Causal-comparative– Descriptive– Correlational– Historical
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Casual-Comparative ResearchCasual-Comparative Research
Seeks to investigate cause-and-effect relationships similar to experimental research
However, researcher cannot manipulate the independent variable because it is something the subject already has– Attribute or organismic variable
Gender
Ethnicity
Medical condition
Also called “ex post facto” research
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Descriptive ResearchDescriptive Research
Seeks to describe specific phenomena or characteristics of a particular group of subjects– Answers the question “what is”– No manipulation of an independent variable
Wide range of methodologies– Surveys– Direct measurement– Observation– Interviews
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Correlational ResearchCorrelational Research
Seeks to determine whether, and to what extent, a relationship exists between two or more variables– No manipulation of an independent variable– May be descriptive or predictive in nature
Cannot establish causality
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Historical ResearchHistorical Research
Seeks to explore events and information from the past in order to provide a better understanding of the present with implications for the future– Answers the question “what was”
Limited to synthesis and interpretation of data that already exists– Primary sources– Secondary sources