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Introduction to Research Design

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Telling anecdotes a personal story to support or refute a general point ... All swans are white. The next swan you see is white. is this a good test of your theory? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Research Design


1
Lecture 22032007
  • Introduction to Research Design

2
Flaws in thinking as part of everyday life
  • Telling anecdotes a personal story to support
    or refute a general point
  • Refers to instinct or laws of nature or what
    everyone knows
  • Uses correlational data as causal (there has been
    a huge increase in crime since mothers started
    working)
  • Uses emotional language instead of reason and
    evidence (dumping babies in child care to be
    looked after by a stranger has to be harmful)
  • Taken from Dian Halpern APA President 2004
    Monitor on Psychbology February issue)

3
3 Goals of Psychological Science
  • Description
  • Careful observation of events and the conditions
    under which they occur.
  • Step one in the development of a theory
  • Prediction
  • Defines when events will and will not occur
  • May allow us to identify magnitude and frequency
    and perhaps make judgments of importance
  • Explanation
  • Specify cause and effect
  • Many causes maybe identified each with a varying
    degree of influence (e.g. the causes of heart
    disease)

4
What defines a solvable research question?
  • Is there life after death?
  • Does ESP exist?
  • Is there a God?
  • Is water divining a good way to find water?

5
The principle of falsifiability
  • Theories must be stated in ways that make it
    possible to refute or disconfirm
  • Predict what will/will not happen

6
All swans are white
  • The next swan you see is white
  • is this a good test of your theory?
  • The next swan you see is black
  • Is this a better test of your theory?

7
Basic and Applied Research
  • Basic Science knowledge for its own sake.
  • The development of logical thought in children
  • Memory for different kinds of word lists
  • Perception of transparency, depth, motion, light
    etc.
  • Facial features and mate selection
  • Bodily odours and sexual attraction
  • Each may start out as an interest of groups of
    researchers the findings of which may or may not
    be developed for practical use.

8
Practical uses of basic research
  • Development of logical thought
  • a test for diagnosing developmental disability
  • Memory for word lists
  • design of specialised vocabularies for
    communication (e.g. aviation)
  • Perception of depth
  • environmental design to warn of hazards (e.g.,
    warning lights)
  • Facial features
  • advertising
  • Bodily odours
  • - perfume

9
Applied Research Questions
  • In Clinical settings What type of therapy
    alleviates depression?
  • In Educational settings What is the best way to
    teach children how to read?
  • In Sport Psychology How does training regime
    impact on performance?
  • In Organisational settings What form of
    management style motivates employees?

10
Sources of ideas for Research
  • Theory-confirmation, refutation, comparison,
    merger
  • Practical Problems-problem definition, solution
    seeking, validating
  • Practitioners' assumptions
  • Prior Research-case studies, conflicting
    findings, overlooked variables, setting
  • and expanding boundaries, testing alternative
    explanations
  • Logical Analysis-analogy, looking at things
    backwards
  • Everyday Experience

11
Formulating a Question
  • Characteristics of a Good Research Question has
    the potential to expand our knowledge base
  • How well grounded the question is in the current
    knowledge base (the problem must have a basis in
    theory, research, or practice (we need to know
    what is already known so that we can judge how
    much it can add to the knowledge base gives us
    an anchor)
  • How researchable it is (how easy it is to
    formulate clear operational definitions of the
    variables involved and clear hypotheses about the
    relationships between the variables)
  • Importance the more information the answer to a
    research question provides, the more important it
    is

12
Stand on the Shoulders of Giants
13
What information will a review provide?
  • relevant theories (be sure you know all relevant
    theories than can explain a phenomenon)
  • look for information on what has been previously
    done on your research question (you want to know
    what has been done, what has not been done, and
    what still needs to be done)
  • information concerning methodology (can borrow
    from methods previously used and can make changes
    in your design based upon what did not work well
    in the past)
  • information on data analysis (need to know how
    you are going to analyze your data to be sure
    that you can actually answer your research
    question-analytic techniques must match the data
    that you collect)
  • A way of turning an interest into a sensible
    question
  • If you have a question you can generate
    hypotheses.

14
Reviewing the Literature
  • To provide a scientific context for the research
    and to validate it against the three criteria for
    a good research question
  • To avoid duplication of effort (if a question has
    been addressed in numerous ways and the answer is
    always similar then it might not be worth
    pursuing further or, you might want to try to
    examine the question in a new way (new setting,
    new population, etc)
  • To identify potential problems in conducting the
    research (knowing in advance the potential
    problems that can arise in the research can help
    you to avoid them)

15
Hypotheses should take two forms-a research
hypothesisa statistical hypothesis
  • Research Hypotheses states an expectation about
    the relationship between variables this
    expectation derives from and answers the research
    question, and so is grounded in prior theory and
    research on the question
  • Statistical Hypotheses transforms the research
    hypothesis into a statement about the expected
    result of a statistical test (directional) must
    accurately represent the research hypothesis

16
Designing the Study
  • How will the study be conducted?
  • Choose a research strategy and a specific design
    within the chosen strategy
  • What will be studied?
  • Choice of operational definition for the
    hypothetical constructs you're studying
  • Where will the study be conducted?
  • Who will be studied?
  • When will the study be conducted?
  • Time factors? Cross-sectional or longitudinal?

17
Research Methods
  • Three broad types
  • Descriptive Methods
  • Relational Methods
  • Experimental Methods
  • Appropriateness depends on the question

18
Descriptive Methods
  • Observational Studies
  • Naturalistic courting behaviour in nightclubs
  • Participant/Action Research
  • Laboratory Observation observation of children
    in a playgroup (allows some manipulation)
  • Case Study Methods
  • N1 in depth analysis (Freud, Piaget)
  • Is generalisability and replicability a problem?

19
Descriptive Methods II
  • Survey Methods
  • Mail, Phone, Web
  • Large samples often used
  • Problems include
  • Opportunism
  • Response rates
  • Gaining access
  • Difficult to assign causation

20
Predictive Relational (correlational) Methods
  • A step up from description in the demonstration
    of co-variation the correlational method
  • If a correlation can be demonstrated then
    predictions can be made from the knowledge of one
    variable only.

21
Questions about the Correlational Method
  • Height and weight are correlated - what can you
    not conclude?
  • Pain experienced in child birth and foot size are
    strongly correlated can you conclude anything?
  • After watching a violent TV program children are
    more aggressive. What can you conclude?
  • But - You can infer causation from correlation
    under some circumstances using a combination of
    sophisticated methodology and statistical
    techniques

22
Next Lecture
  • The experimental method
  • Its strengths
  • Its weaknesses
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