Psychology - MR. CALLAWAY Mundy’s Mill High SchoolUnit 2.1 - RESEARCH METHODS
How do psychologists ask & answer questions?Intro to Research
Differentiate types of research with regard to purpose, strengths, & weaknesses
Why use each of the research methods?Describe how research design drives the reasonable conclusions that can be drawn
How can each research method best drive the conclusions based on their results?
The Scientific Method
1. Observe some aspect of the universe. Formulate a question.
2. Invent a theory (hypothesis) that is consistent with what you have observed.
3. Use the theory to make predictions. 4. Test those predictions by experiments or further
observations. 5. Modify the theory in the light of your results. 6. Go to step 3, if necessary.7. Draw conclusions.8. Report your results.
Hypothesis: A tentative theory that has not yet been tested.
Has operational definitions: how you will measure it. (can vary among participants)
The theory must be replicable.
Theory aims to explain a phenomenon, not “prove”
hypothesis. It can only support or disprove.
Proving a hypothesis is impossible!
A theory is a system of interrelated ideas used to
explain a set of observations.
A scientific theory must be testable.
Findings support the hypotheses: Confidence in the theory that
the hypotheses were derived from grows.
Findings fail to support the hypotheses: Confidence in the theory
diminishes. The theory may then be revised or discarded.
Theory construction:Gradual, iterative process that is always subject to revision.
Types of Research
1. Descriptive
2. Correlational
3. Experimental
Types of Descriptive
Research
1. The Case Study2. The Survey3. Naturalistic Observation
Descriptive Research
What is going on in this picture?
We cannot say exactly, but we can describe what we see.
Thus we have…..
Descriptive Research
What is going on in this picture?
Thus we have…..
This picture of Usain Bolt hanging out with kids in the Czech Republic?
Who is Usain Bolt?
Arguably the most naturally gifted athlete the world has ever seen, Usain St Leo Bolt, confirmed his tremendous talents when he realized his dreams by winning a phenomenal 3 gold medals & breaking three world records at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China. Bolt became the first man in Olympic history to win both the 100m and 200m races in world record times and then as part of the 4x100m team that also smashed the world record later in the meet. He created history again and became a legend at the 2012 Olympic Games in London by defending all 3 Olympic titles with 100m, 200m and 4x100m victories, the latter in a new world record time of 36.84 secs. (from UsainBolt.com)
Descriptive Research
Any research that observes & records.Does not talk about relationships, it just describes.
Also called "statistical research."
Descriptive Research:
1. The Case Study
1 person (or situation) is observed in depth.A case study is an intensive analysis or research of an individual unit (e.g., a person, group, or event) stressing developmental factors in relation to context.
Nearly every aspect of the subject's life & history is analyzed to seek patterns & causes for behavior. Hope is that learning gained from studying one case can be generalized to many others. Unfortunately, case studies tend to be highly subjective and it is difficult to generalize results to a larger population.
Descriptive Research:
1. The Case Study
Clinical psychologists use case studies to present information about a person suffering from a particular disorder.Case studies allow researchers to get the richest possible picture of what they are studying, there are limitations.... Limitations: May contain evidence that a certain researcher thought to be important. Researchers may overinflate importance because it is a small sample.Unlikely to be representative of people in general. Longitudinal case study - participants could exit & it is difficult to determine cause. Participants who exit, may do so for significant reasons compared to those who do not exit the study.
Descriptive Research:
2. The Survey Method
For ascertaining the self-reported attitudes, opinions or behaviors of people usually by questioning a representative, random sample of people. You give a survey when you want to know how people “feel.”Both descriptive & correlational research. Interview, mail, phone, etc.Cheap, anonymous, diverse population, & easy to get random sampling: A sampling that represents your population you want to study.
Descriptive Research:
2. The Survey Method
Validity of data depends upon:How questions are worded.Who was surveyed? Did they represent the population?
Limitations: Willingness of people to complete surveyPeople may say what they ‘think’ others want them to say.Still is a great way to gather data & look at raw numbers.
Survey Method: The Bad
★ Low Response Rate★ People Lie or just misinterpret themselves.★ Wording Effects
How accurate would a survey be about the
frequency of diarrhea?
Descriptive Research:
2. The Survey Method
Students often confuse the use of surveys to measure the dependent variable in an experiment with the survey method.While surveys can be used as part of the experimental method, the survey method, as described, is a kind of correlational research in which the researcher does not manipulate the independent variable.
Why do we sample?
False Consensus Effect:
Tendency to overestimate
the extent to which
others share our beliefs
& behaviors.
Descriptive Research:
3. Naturalistic Observation
Observing & recording behavior in natural environment.No control or interaction:
Just observation.Students often confuse naturalistic observation with field experiments.
Both involve doing research out in the world. However, N.O. does not impact behavior of participants
What are the benefits & drawbacks of
Naturalistic Observation?
Examples of Naturalistic Observation
The goal: get a realistic & rich picture of the participants’ behavior. To that end, control is sacrificed.
Jane Goodall’s work at Gombe Stream National Park in Tanzania for 40 years is an example of N.O.
By observing chimpanzee behavior she was able to attain a deeper understanding than any human had previously.
However, some of very strict scientific protocol were not always used. Goodall was not a natural scientist. Her insights though did lead to an understanding that chimps have personalities, use tools, are not vegetarians, and can behave in a VERY aggressive manner.
Pictured to the right: (Top) Jane Goodall at the Houston Zoo in 2012.
Naturalistic Observation
Drawbacks: Valuable where other methods are likely to be disruptive or misleading, however if people know they are being observed, they tend to act differently than they normally would.Also, observations can be distorted if observers expect to see certain types of behaviors. Can be fixed by having a group of observers.
Hawthorne Effect = Merely selecting individuals to participate can impact their behavior and performance alone.
Hawthorne Works had commissioned a study to see if its workers would become more productive in higher or lower levels of light.
The workers' productivity seemed to improve when changes were made and slumped when the study was concluded.
It was suggested that the productivity gain occurred due to the impact of the motivational effect on the workers as a result of the interest being shown in them.
Experimental Research
Explores cause & effect relationships.
Famous experiments in Psych:★ Pavlov’s salivating dogs★ Milgram’s obedience study★ Asch’s conformity experiment
Experiments are the only research method that isolates cause and effect!
Like other sciences, experimentation forms the backbone of research in psychology.
Experimental Research
Explores cause & effect relationships.
Eating too many bananas causes -->
Constipation
Experimental Terminology
Independent Variable - IV: Factor that is manipulated
Dependent Variable - DV: Factor that is measured
Extraneous Variables: Factors that affect DV, that are not IV
Experimental Group: Group exposed to IV
Control Group: Group not exposed to IVPlacebo: Inert substance that is in place of IV in Control Group
Experimental Terminology
Experimental Group: Group exposed to Independent Variable, receives special treatment.
Control Group: Group not exposed to Independent Variable, comparison groups.
Experimental Terminology
Valid = research measures what the researcher set out to measure; it is accurate.
Reliable = research can be replicated; it is consistent.
Sample = group of participants.
Population = anyone or anything that could possibly be selected to be the sample.
Random Selection = every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected.
Random Assignment = controls for participant-relevant confounding variables. Assignment is the process of dividing participants into groups AFTER selection. Using random assignment gives participants an equal chance of being placed into any group.
Stratified sampling = a process that allows a researcher to ensure that the sample represents the population on some criteria. (example, representation of different races, genders, etc.)**Psychologists see “random” differently than laypeople do. Random sampling is best done using a computer,
a table of random numbers, or picking names from a hat.**
Participant-relevant confounding variable = Using random assignment limits the effect. Participants should not be able to choose their group.
Situation-relevant confounding variable = The situations into which the different groups are put must be equivalent except for differences produced by the independent variable.
Experimental Method
Only experiments can identify cause-and-effect relationships.
Experimenter bias = a special kind of situation-relevant confounding variable. Experiment bias is the unconscious tendency for researchers to treat members of the experimental and control groups differently to increase the chance of confirming their hypothesis.
Can be eliminated using double-blind procedure: neither the participants nor the researcher are able to affect the outcome of the research. (have someone who is unfamiliar with the participant role to interact with the participant)
Single blind = participants do not know which group they have been assigned.
Experimental Method
AKA: “Reactivity”
Experimental Group = gets the treatment operationalized in the independent variable.
Control Group = does not get the independent variable. (without the control group, one can not know whether changes in the experimental group are due to the experimental treatment or simply to any treatment at all)
Hawthorne Effect = Merely selecting individuals to participate can impact their behavior and performance alone. Hawthorne Works had commissioned a study to see if its workers would become more productive in higher or lower levels of light. The workers' productivity seemed to improve when changes were made and slumped when the study was concluded. It was suggested that the productivity gain occurred due to the impact of the motivational effect on the workers as a result of the interest being shown in them.
Placebo method = an inert but otherwise identical substance.
Placebo effect = People exhibit psychological effects of a drug, even though it is a placebo and not an actual drug.
Experiment: Hypothesis - Caffeine helps keep high school teachers alert & happy.
POPULATION: MMHS Teachers Representative Sample:
Male & Female
Multiple Subjects
Multiple Houses, Locations
Random Sample:
All teacher names are put into a hat
and pulled 60 names.
Stratified Sample:
Divide the staff into categories
(male/female, new/vets, different
subjects taught)
Experiment: Hypothesis - Caffeine helps keep high school teachers alert & happy.
Experimental Group:
Group A - participants drink 2
cups of regular (caffeinated)
coffee every morning for a
month.
Control Groups:
Group B - Participants drink 2 cups
of decaf coffee every morning for a
month
Group C - Participants drink hot,
brown, coffee flavored water for a
month
How do we assign groups?
After participants are
gathered, hand out
numbered cards in no
particular order to all.
Separate by number
into control &
experimental groups.
Random Sample:
Once a sample is obtained,
researcher randomly assigns
participants to control &
experimental groups.
Experiment: Hypothesis - Caffeine helps keep high school teachers alert & happy.
Independent Variable:
(cause)
The factor manipulated by the
experimenter whose effect is
being studied.
Type of drink:
caffeinated,
decaf, water
Dependent Variable:
(effect)
The factor that may change in
response to independent
variable. In psych, it is usually
behavior or mental process.
How is it measured?
Questionnaire at
beginning to establish
a baseline
& then at the end of
each day for the
month.
What is measured?
Behavior:
Alertness/Crankiness, etc.
In our experiment, group C is getting a “placebo” -they think it’s coffee or caffeine, but it is not.
This is to check the “true effect” of the independent variable.
Experiment: Hypothesis - Caffeine helps keep high school teachers alert & happy.
Single Blind:
Teachers (participants) do not
know which group (control or
experimental) they have been
assigned.
Double Blind:
Teachers (participants) nor the
person gathering data know which
group is the control or
experimental group.
Confounding Variables!
They are not good.
★ Still some caffeine in decaf
coffee.
★ - Experience with coffee prior to
experiment (i.e. whether they
have had coffee in the past)
★ - Amount of sleep
Which is better, why?
Double blind is better, but not
always necessary. It balances
out bias.
Quasi-ExperimentsStudies that have the same ‘control’ as experiments yet do not include the random assignment of participants.
EXAMPLE:
Researchers want to test hypothesis that a pregnant woman’s use
of drugs will cause abnormalities in her developing baby.
You would need to randomly assign women who are 8 weeks pregnant to a group that would be using drugs.
Could you ethically complete this experiment?A quasi-experiment would be used in a case like this where researchers would not be able to do the experiment as normal. A researcher would never be allowed to administer drugs to a pregnant woman, just to test the effects on the baby. No IRB would allow it!However, there are women who do drugs and are pregnant. If you were able to get them to join the experiment, you could then test the effects. These types of situations are what make these experiments “quasi” or a semblance of an experiment. It seems like an experiment, but lacks the normal controls.
The tendencyto believe,after learning the outcome, that you
knew it all along.
The tendencyto believe,after learning the outcome, that you
knew it all along.
Hindsight Bias
Overconfidence
We tend to think we know more than we do.
82% of U.S. drivers consider themselves to be in the top 30% of their group in terms of safety
81% of new business owners felt they had an excellent chance of their businesses succeeding. When asked about the success of their peers, the answer was only 39%. (Now that's overconfidence!!!)