HIGHER PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 85
About This Presentation
Title:

HIGHER PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR

Description:

HIGHER PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR Unit 2 Investigating behaviour Research Log- Internal assessment (Log must be completed and submitted before the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:215
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 86
Provided by: PerthC
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: HIGHER PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR


1
HIGHER PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Unit 2 Investigating behaviour
  • Research Log- Internal assessment (Log must be
    completed and submitted before the Investigation
    can be sent off to SQA- 25th January)
  • NAB- Internal assessment (30 minute
    examination-20 marks- provisional date 25th Feb)
  • Research Investigation (draft can be submitted to
    lecturer although report will be examined
    externally by SQA- must be submitted no later
    than 12th April)
  • NB The research investigation will contribute to
    the overall mark as 20, main exam paper 80.

2
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Research Methods
  • Nature of research and key terms
  • Sampling
  • Methods of collecting data (experimental and
    non-experimental)
  • Analysing data
  • Descriptive statistics (measures of central
    tendency and measures of dispersion)
  • Graphical representations

3
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • What are Research Methods?
  • Research methods include all aspects of the
    research process, from planning, through
    implementation and on to reporting of findings.
  • Cyclical nature of research due to the fact that
    we cannot prove any theory to be 100 correct!
    This is due to the fact that we do not know what
    evidence may be unearthed in the future although
    we can falsify theories by finding evidence
    against e.g. unlimited capacity of STM/thought
    inner language.
  • Results can only confirm or refute a hypothesis
    which in both cases must lead to further
    research- to strengthen existing theory or find
    evidence for revised theory.

4
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Aims
  • The aim of a study is to answer a research
    question, which has been posed. Questions can
    come from casual observations or from ongoing
    research which may uncover further questions on a
    topic. The aim must therefore have an achievable
    goal.
  • Hypotheses
  • A hypothesis is a statement, which predicts what
    the experimenter expects to occur. The
    hypothesis should be tested against reality and
    can then be supported or rejected. It must be
    possible to gather evidence that will demonstrate
    whether the hypothesis has been supported. A
    hypothesis usually predicts some sort of link
    between two variables. It may predict an effect
    or a difference, or a relationship.

5
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • An Experimental hypothesis (aka research
    hypothesis or alternative hypothesis) is the
    prediction that the manipulation of the
    independent variable will have an effect on the
    dependent variable.
  • If the hypothesis is that the IV will simply have
    an effect on the DV then it is said to be a
    non-directional (or 2 tailed) hypothesis.
  • Social pressure will have an effect on levels of
    conformity (2 tailed)
  • If however, the hypothesis is more specific, eg
    heart rate will be expected to increase when
    adrenaline is administered because the
    prediction suggests a direction in which the
    change will be seen it is known as a directional
    hypothesis (or 1 tailed), eg
  •  Social pressure will increase levels of
    conformity (1 tailed)
  • Hypotheses in correlational studies propose that
    there will be a relationship between two
    co-variables e.g. watching violent movies and
    levels of aggression.

6
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • A Null hypothesis is a prediction that the
    results obtained in the experiment will be due to
    chance or to some other factor not covered by the
    experimental hypothesis.
  • The null hypothesis is used for statistical
    purposes to evaluate the results. The
    probability of the null hypothesis being correct
    is known as the significance level. In
    psychology we generally look for a significance
    level of lt0.05 (or 5).
  • This means that we want to be more than 95 sure
    that the results did not occur through chance.
    For results of 0.05 or less, we reject the null
    hypothesis (ie there is less than 5 probability
    or 1 in 20 chance that the results were a fluke)
    and accept the experimental hypothesis (ie there
    is at least a 95 probability that the
    manipulation of the IV brought about the change
    in the DV), eg
  • Social pressure will have no effect on levels of
    conformity.
  • The main point is that if we try and falsify the
    null hypothesis then we have strong evidence to
    support the experimental hypothesis.

7
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • A hypothesis predicts some sort of link between
    two variables.
  • The experimental method of research is a
    controlled procedure that sees the manipulation
    of an independent variable (IV) to observe and
    measure any effect this has on a dependent
    variable (DV).
  • The essential features of the experimental method
    are then the control, observation and measurement
    of variables.
  • The experimental method makes us more confident
    about the validity of any cause-effect
    relationship established between an independent
    and dependent variable.
  • In contrast, non-experimental and correlational
    studies cannot determine cause and effect as
    they are not manipulating the IV they merely
    explore and describe relationships between
    variables

8
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • OPERATIONALISATION refers to how variables
    (factors, things that we are interested in) are
    specified in such a way that they can be easily
    measured or manipulated.
  • For example, in order to investigate the effects
    of caffeine on concentration and learning we
    need to operationalise the two variables we are
    interested in
  • Caffeine -by specifying the exact amount of
    caffeine to be used 1 cup, 2 cups or 5 cups so
    that we can manipulate the IV
  • Concentration and learning- by specifying a task
    that will allow us to measure e.g. comprehension,
    memory task.
  • Many aspects of behaviour to investigate but can
    we operationalise the variables involved?
  • E.g people are happier when they work/ people
    work better under quiet conditions

9
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • A variable is something that is open to change,
    eg behaviours, performance or emotions or
    something in the environment or situation.
  • The independent variable (IV) is the variable or
    thing that the experimenter manipulates/changes
    to see whether it affects something else, eg
  • If the experimental hypothesis is that
    background noise will have an effect on
    short-term memory performance 
  • then background noise is the IV.
  • The experimenter manipulates the background
    noise.
  • The independent variable can have two or more
    conditions. A condition is a particular
    manipulation of the IV, eg
  • Condition 1 No loud music (control group)
  • Condition 2 Loud rock music (experimental
    group)

10
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • The dependent variable (DV) is the response being
    measured, eg behaviour, emotion, performance. In
    the above example short-term memory performance
    is the DV.
  • An extraneous variable is any variable, other
    than the IV that may affect the DV. These
    variables can obscure or mask the effect of the
    IV on the DV. The researcher should try to
    eliminate or minimise their influence. They can
    be random factors that will affect any condition
    of the IV, eg
  • There is noise from roadworks throughout both
    conditions of the memory task.
  • A confounding variable is again a variable, other
    than the IV that affects the DV. Their effect is
    more systematic than extraneous variables and
    will affect only one condition of the IV, eg
  • there is noise from roadworks during only one of
    the conditions.

11
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Control Groups and Experimental Groups
  • Often, two conditions of the IV will simply be
    presence or absence of a variable (as in the
    example above).
  • In this case the control group is the group where
    the variable is absent. In the above example
    with loud music, the control group would not have
    loud music playing while they complete their
    short-term memory task.
  • The experimental group, would have loud music
    playing in the background. Sometimes, conditions
    of the IV cannot be called control and
    experimental, but may simply be different, eg
    loud rock music in the background and loud
    classical music in the background.
  • Control groups are an essential feature in
    scientific research (compare to placebo effect)
    and allow researchers to observe the DV in
    similar conditions to the experimental
    manipulations (e.g. major extraneous
    variable-time! See also Hawthorne effect).

12
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Experimental Design
  • Although all experiments have the same basic
    structure, ie IV/DV, control group(s)/
    experimental group(s), a variety of experimental
    designs exist in psychology. Some of these
    designs are more complex than others.
  • Experimental design concerns the decisions which
    are taken when an experiment is set up. These
    decisions focus on the ways in which participants
    are selected and then allocated to the conditions
    within an experiment.
  • Three of the most commonly used designs are the
    repeated measures design, the independent groups
    design and the matched pairs design.

13
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Repeated Measures Design
  • The repeated measures design is sometimes also
    called the related measures design or the within
    subjects design. Regardless of which of these
    names it is given, this design always involves
    using the same participants in all conditions of
    the IV. An illustration of a repeated measures
    design-based on the previous example of
    background noise and short-term memory, would
    mean that the same people would take part in each
    condition.

14
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Repeated Measures Design
  • Advantages. These include the convenience of
    only having one set of participants to find (this
    is because you are using the same sample more
    than once), and the fact that you are avoiding
    the type of bias which inevitably arises from the
    individual differences between people. Because
    the same individuals are being used over again,
    there is less risk of bias from these normal
    variations which exist between people. However,
    the researcher may have to devise two (or more)
    memory tasks of equal difficulty.
  • Disadvantage Practice effects, boredom and
    fatigue can all effect results and are more
    pronounced due to the fact that participants have
    to take part in all conditions. These order
    effects can lead to performance differing in the
    conditions and this results in a confounding
    variable due to the fact that performance is only
    affected in one condition.

15
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Counterbalancing
  • In order to get over this bias, the experimenter
    may counterbalance the order of the experimental
    conditions. Instead of always doing Condition 1
    first, followed by Condition 2, some subjects may
    do Condition 2 first, followed by Condition 1.
    The idea is that counterbalancing should cancel
    out order effects overall.
  • The experimenter should also ensure that all
    materials used within the conditions are
    equivalent.
  • Items and participants should be randomly
    allocated to the experimental conditions.

16
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Independent Groups Design
  •  
  • The independent groups design involves using
    different participants for each condition. This
    is sometimes also called the independent subjects
    design, independent samples design, or the
    between groups design.
  • Regardless of which of these names it is given,
    this design always selects two completely
    separate groups of people. An entirely different
    group of people take each condition of the
    experiment. Participants are allocated to each
    condition randomly.
  • You may need fewer items or materials using this
    design but you do need more people!
  •  

17
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Independent Groups Design
  • The main difficulty with the independent groups
    design is that any differences in the DV between
    two conditions may be attributable to differences
    between the two participant groups. This is
    known as the problem of participant variables.
  • Humans (or animals) are infinitely variable and
    there may well be differences between the
    participants chosen by you that could
    systematically affect one condition and spoil
    your results.
  • To avoid or at least minimise this, the
    researcher must use something called random
    allocation. In random allocation, each person has
    an equal chance of being assigned to either
    condition. This can be assigned by pulling names
    out of a hat or tossing a coin to decide who is
    in which group. In this way you can get a
    balanced mixture of all sorts of people in each
    group, and the bias should be eliminated.

18
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Matched Pairs Design
  • Here each participant in one condition matches a
    participant in the other condition on one or more
    participant variable. Eg to control for the
    participant variable of memory ability, we could
    create two samples containing participants who
    have matching memory abilities. To create
    matched samples, we would first identify pairs of
    participants who have similar scores on the
    variable to be controlled (using a pre-test of
    memory ability). One member would then be
    randomly assigned to one of the two conditions
    and the other member to the other condition.
  • If we select two people who have a very good
    memory, we would randomly assign one of them to
    the control condition of no background noise
    and the other to the experimental condition of
    loud rock music. Likewise someone with a very
    poor memory in the first condition would be
    matched with someone with an equally poor memory
    in the second condition. In this design the
    extraneous variable of memory ability is
    prevented from becoming a confounding variable.

19
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  •  
  • The aim of the experimental method is to control
    the IV to measure its impact on the DV.
    However, many other variables exist which can
    impact on the DV and the experimenter must
    attempt to control these.
  • Extraneous variables include any situational
    variable found in the experimental setting (e.g.
    time of day, noise), experimenter variables,
    include experimenter and expectancy effect (see
    Rosenthal, 1966), and participant variables are
    those participant peculiarities that can
    influence results.

20
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  •  
  • These would include participant expectancy and
    demand characteristics (cues that unconsciously
    suggest what is expected of participants) as
    simply being in an experimental situation may
    influence behaviour (discuss Hawthorne effect).
  • To control for extraneous and confounding
    variables the experimenter can use the single
    blind/double blind technique (participants/both
    participants and experimenter ignorant to purpose
    of study), standardised instructions and
    procedure (for replication) and select the most
    appropriate design for the study.
  • A related, or within-subjects design like
    repeated measures, OR an unrelated, between
    subjects design like independent measures.

21
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Demand Characteristics
  • There is a further problem to do with the people
    you use in experiments known as demand
    characteristics (or participant bias). Demand
    characteristics is a term that is used to
    describe the process that occurs when people know
    or think they know what the experiment is about
    or what the experimenter is looking for. When
    this happens to people in experiments, it can
    affect the way they behave. Some people might
    try to be very nice and attempt to help you get
    the results they think you want. Other people
    might deliberately try to prevent you from
    getting the result they think you want perhaps
    because they want to show that they know what
    you are up to and are not going to be taken in by
    it!

22
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Demand Characteristics
  • One way to combat this is to run the experiment
    as a single blind. In a single blind design the
    participants are not told what the experimenter
    is looking for until after the experiment is
    finished. Sometimes the experimenter may
    actually lie to them about the true nature of the
    research in order to prevent them from finding
    out the real purpose of the experiment. This of
    course raises some ethical issues.
  • The reason for the use of the single blind
    technique is so that, if participants do not know
    what is being looked for, they cannot
    deliberately give you the results you want or
    prevent you from getting them. However, just the
    simple knowledge that they are in an experimental
    situation may result in some participants
    behaving or performing differently than they
    otherwise would. This is known as the Hawthorne
    Effect.

23
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Experimenter Effect and Bias 
  • Experimenter effects arise from the way in which
    an experimenter interacts with his/her
    participants. Experimenters can influence how
    people respond to them in a number of ways,
    simply by virtue of their age, sex, or
    personality and by their treatment of
    participants. These are known as experimenter
    effects.
  • Of course, experimenters should always try to
    ensure that they treat all their participants in
    the same way. To do this, experimenters use
    standardised instructions. Standardised
    instructions are instructions that are written
    down by the experimenter prior to the experiment
    taking place. They are given or read out to each
    participant of the experiment in an identical
    fashion. This helps ensure that any differences
    found between groups cannot be due to the way
    participants were treated by the experimenter.

24
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Experimenter bias occurs when the expectations of
    the experimenter unconsciously influence the way
    in which he or she behaves or interprets what is
    happening in the experiment. Experimenter bias
    can significantly influence the results of an
    experiment. One way to counteract experimenter
    bias is to use a double blind technique. Here,
    not only are the participants not told of the
    true nature of the study, but neither are the
    people who collect the results. In other words,
    the experimenter sets up the experiment and then
    lets other people run the research. Afterwards
    he or she simply collects the data for analysis.
    By doing this, it is hoped that the data is
    collected in an unbiased way.
  •  
  • The use of a double blind technique is quite
    common in medical research in general and in drug
    trials in particular. Here, some people are
    given the drug and others are given a placebo (ie
    a substance known to have no effect). Neither
    the participants nor the researchers know which
    (drug or placebo) any individual participant has
    been given. This information is only disclosed
    after the results have all been collected.

25
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Key terms
  • Experimenter effects e.g. gender of experimenter
    may effect results?
  • Participant effects e.g. behaviour changes due to
    study (Hawthorne effect)
  • Situational variables e.g. factors in the
    environment (noise, time of day etc)
  • Demand characteristics e.g. cues that
    unconsciously suggest what is expected of
    participants (memory and noise- condition with
    noise more casual)
  • Standardised instructions/procedure- used to
    avoid experimenter effects and situational
    variables (recipe?)
  • Single blind/double blind-participant/experimenter
    and participant blind to actual purpose of
    study

26
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Methods of Collecting Data
  • Laboratory Experiments
  • There are several types of experiment but only
    laboratory and field experiments are considered
    to be true experiments in the sense that the
    experimenter has direct control over the
    independent variable.
  • In a laboratory experiment, the investigation
    takes place entirely in a laboratory environment,
    ie not in the real world, but in a carefully
    controlled, artificial setting.

27
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Methods of Collecting Data
  • In a laboratory experiment, the environment is
    completely controlled by the experimenter. The
    relationship between two things is investigated
    by deliberately producing a change in one
    variable (the independent variable or IV) and
    carefully recording what effect this has on the
    other variable (the dependent variable or DV).
  • Control and replication are key concepts in
    laboratory experiments in particular. If an
    experimental result is true it should always be
    possible to reproduce it, ie it is reliable.

28
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Methods of Collecting Data
  • However, laboratory experiments are not entirely
    suitable for many psychological investigations
    because they have to take place in such
    artificial situations and, therefore, the results
    cannot really generalise to real life situations.
  • Simply by taking people (especially children)
    into laboratories, you are changing their social
    situation(s) in a very fundamental way. They
    therefore may not react to a stimulus in the same
    way as they would in a real life (normal)
    situation.
  • There are also certain codes of conduct (ethics)
    which have to be strictly applied when carrying
    out experiments which involve people (and
    children in particular). These can make
    laboratory experiments difficult to carry out in
    practice (see BPS Guidelines on Ethics).

29
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Field Experiments
  • In a field experiment, the investigation takes
    place in everyday surroundings. The participants
    are often unaware that they are participating in
    a psychology experiment at all. However, the
    independent variable is still being manipulated
    by the experimenter, who is interested in finding
    out what effect it has on the dependent variable.
  • The environment, on the other hand, cannot be
    controlled by the experimenter in a field
    experiment. This is because field experiments
    take place in real-life settings, eg shopping
    centres, workplace, schools etc. In real life
    settings variables which may affect the result of
    an experiment are always present to some extent.
    They can never be eliminated. The degree of
    control that the experimenter has in a field
    experiment is therefore much less than in that of
    a laboratory experiment.

30
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Field Experiments
  •  
  • Field experiments are useful in that they are
    more true to life and may tap human behaviour
    more accurately than a laboratory-based
    investigation. Also, because, in a field
    experiment, participants are usually unaware that
    the experiment is taking place, there is little
    risk that their behaviour will become affected by
    their knowledge of the experimenters presence or
    the experimental situation. These are strong
    points in favour of field experiments.

31
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Field Experiments
  • Field experiments do have some drawbacks
    associated with them also however. The loss of
    control which is an inevitable part of the field
    experiment means it is more difficult to be sure
    exactly what is causing what, and a much larger
    element of doubt must remain about this than with
    a laboratory based experiment.
  • There is much less scope with a field experiment
    for replication. This is partly because the
    exact conditions are difficult to repeat (since
    they have not really been controlled in the first
    place) and partly because field experiments are
    much more time-consuming and expensive for a
    researcher to conduct than laboratory-based
    experiments.
  • The problem of ethics exists for field
    experimenter also. There is a clear ethical
    issue in a situation where you are
    observing/experimenting with people without their
    full knowledge and prior consent being obtained.

32
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Natural Experiments
  • Natural experiments belong to a category of
    experiments known as quasi experiments.
  •  
  • As in all experiments, natural experiments have
    independent and dependent variables.
  •  
  • Quasi experiments are those where one or both of
    the following conditions apply
  • The experimenter does not have control over the
    allocation of participants to the different
    levels of the IV.
  • and/or
  • The researcher cannot control the IV. This is
    because the IV is controlled by someone else, eg
    hospital managers (in example below).
  •  

33
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • For instance, a hospital may decide to relax
    visiting regulations to allow parents to see
    their sick child at anytime during the hospital
    stay. In this situation there is a naturally
    occurring group which is not experiencing the
    change (control condition of the IV) who can be
    used for comparison purposes with the group of
    children who are experiencing the change
    (experimental condition of the IV).
  • Recovery rates, morale and anxiety levels (the
    dependent variables) can be compared for the two
    groups with the aim of ascertaining whether or
    not the more relaxed visiting regulations produce
    faster recovery rates and lower anxiety levels in
    the group of patients who were given more access
    to their relatives.
  • Although this is an experiment in most senses of
    the word, the IV is not at all controlled by the
    experimenter. In this case the IV has occurred
    naturally.

34
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Natural experiments have an advantage over field
    experiments in that the investigator is not
    interfering in any way, since the situation will
    be occurring whether he/she investigates it or
    not.
  • In fact, the natural experiment is really the
    only way to study cause and effect where there
    are ethical objections to manipulation of
    variables.
  • Furthermore, natural experiments minimise the
    risk of having experimenter effects - the
    unwanted effects that the very presence of an
    experimenter may have on the behaviour of
    participants, since there is often no
    experimenter actually present.

35
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • However, natural experiments, in common with
    field experiments, do have a major disadvantage
    in their loss of control over variables.
  • Similarly, replication is not really possible
    since it is unlikely that a natural experiment
    would occur more often than once. Equally, as
    with field experiments such experiments are time
    consuming and expensive to run.

36
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • SAMPLING
  • In any psychological research sampling is
    crucial.
  • In order to conduct research, psychology needs
    participants to study.
  • It is usually impossible to study everyone of
    interest in your target population (group of
    interest), so psychologists sample from this
    target population instead.
  •  
  • Poor sampling however will give you poor results
    and poor conclusions.
  •  
  • Any sample used in any kind of research in
    psychology should reflect the target population
    onto which the researcher wants to generalise
    their results and conclusions.

37
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • SAMPLING
  • Good sampling allows for the generalisation of
    your results onto the target population from
    which your sample is drawn.
  • You can infer certain things i.e. how the
    population of a country might vote. Because of
    the desire to generalise results and conclusions
    a sample must be as representative of the target
    population as possible.

38
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Random sampling
  • Random sampling is where every member of a target
    population has an equal chance of being chosen to
    take part in your research.  
  • It could be done by drawing straws or pulling
    names from hat.
  • An example of random sampling would be if you
    wanted to get information from a college
    community about their potential use of a new
    college sports centre.
  • You could use random sampling by previously
    deciding that every 10th person to come through
    the main entrance during a certain time is asked
    to participate in the survey.
  • The people who complete the survey are your
    random sample. It is random because every person
    coming through the main entrance had an equal
    chance (1 10 in this instance) of being chosen
    for the survey.

39
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Stratified sampling
  • Stratified sampling occurs when you look at your
    target population and decide to make up a sample
    for your research reflecting the make-up of the
    target population.
  • At a simple level, if your target population were
    60 male, and 40 female, your stratified sample
    would reflect this gender balance.
  •  
  • In a stratified sample of 100, 60 would have to
    be male and 40 female. You stratify on the
    basis of the variables you think are important to
    your research.

40
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Opportunity sampling
  • Opportunity sampling comprises exactly what it
    says. Your sample is made up from whoever is
    available and around at the time. If you need 20
    participants an opportunity sample are the first
    20 people you find willing to assist.
  •  
  • Opportunity sampling is particularly popular in
    student research because opportunity sampling is
    convenient.
  •  

41
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Quota sampling
  • Quota sampling is popular in consumer research.
    Quota sampling is having a sample from a
    particular strata or subcategory in society, in
    equal proportion to their occurrence in the
    target population.
  • Same points as stratified except
  • once sub-groups have been identified, selection
    within the sub-group is at the discretion of the
    researcher, eg opportunity sampling is the most
    likely.
  • This method is commonly used when investigating
    sex differences, where an equal proportion of
    each sex must be selected. 

42
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Self-selected Sampling
  • Often known as a volunteer sample.
  • Participants may become involved through
    replying to advertisements.
  • A biased response is likely since a small
    minority of the target population will be likely
    to respond and those that do will be likely to
    have specific reasons for wanting to be involved.
    This is often based on the subject of the study.

43
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • With all sampling methods
  • The sample should be representative of the
    target population.
  • If it is representative then generalisations
    can be made from the sample to the target
    population.
  • It is necessary to avoid obtaining a biased
    sample. This is possible if a systematic
    approach is taken when deciding on the sampling
    method used and in carrying out the
    administration of it.
  •  
  • It is important to identify characteristics which
    are important to the study when carrying out the
    sampling, eg sex, age, etc.

44
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • With all sampling methods
  • The sample should be representative of the
    target population.
  • If it is representative then generalisations
    can be made from the sample to the target
    population.
  • It is necessary to avoid obtaining a biased
    sample. This is possible if a systematic
    approach is taken when deciding on the sampling
    method used and in carrying out the
    administration of it.
  •  
  • It is important to identify characteristics which
    are important to the study when carrying out the
    sampling, eg sex, age, etc.

45
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • REVISION
  • Research Process
  • Key terms (e.g. aim, hypothesis, qualitative and
    quantitative research, variables-IV, DV,
    extraneous, confounding, control groups,
    samples/populations, reliability and validity)
  • Experimental method
  • Correlational method/technique
  • Non-experimental methods (survey, observation,
    case studies)
  • Data analysis (descriptive statistics-mean, mode
    and media, range, SD, graphical
    representations-scattergrams, bar, line and pie
    charts)

46
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Quantitative and Qualitative Research
  • The methods used by psychologists can be
    quantitative or qualitative.
  • Where the research aims to produce numerical
    results from data that can be measured or
    counted then the research is categorised as
    quantitative.
  • Qualitative data is all other data, for example,
    detailed observations of behaviour or open-ended
    responses in questionnaires.

47
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Reliability and Validity
  • Reliability is the extent to which the same
    measure produces the same results each time it is
    used.
  • A test, or measure is reliable if it is stable
    over time and distance, ie it produces the same
    results on the same people each time it is used
    in a day, week, month etc or in different parts
    of the country on a matched group of people.
  • Validity establishes that a measure is measuring
    exactly what you expect it to measure, eg an IQ
    test should test intelligence and not memory.

48
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Ecological validity is the extent to which
    findings in a study are true to life.
  • Experiments can be carried out in laboratories or
    in more natural settings (in the field).
    Carrying out an experiment in the field does not
    automatically imply ecological validity.
  • If the same behaviour is recorded in a variety of
    naturalistic settings then a study can be said to
    have ecological validity. If however, the study
    does not transfer to other settings then we can
    simply say that the study is high in realism but
    not high in ecological validity.

49
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Non-experimental methods
  • Survey
  • Any research method that uses oral or written
    instructions/questions must first standardise
    them.
  • This is to ensure that all participants/respondent
    s get the same instructions/questions, and that
    these instructions/questions are clear and
    unambiguous.
  • Unless this happens questions of validity and
    reliability will arise.

50
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  •  
  • Validity concerns do the questions measure what
    they claim to measure?  
  • A question of reliability would also arise if
    researchers didnt standardise instructions/questi
    ons beforehand. If left up to their own devices
    to give instructions and ask questions,
    researchers would be inconsistent in what they
    said to different individuals.
  • Any information got from such a non-standardised
    situation, and any claims made as a result, is
    questionable. It is not reliable as data to lend
    support to hypotheses, or as objective fact about
    behaviours, attitudes, opinions, beliefs or
    values.

51
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  •  
  • Poorly designed instructions and questions see a
    survey suffer from the GIGO effect. Quite simply,
    Garbage in, garbage out!
  •  
  • A poorly designed questionnaire can result in
    acquiescence response, socially desirable
    answers, and response set.
  •  
  • Acquiescence response is a tendency people have
    to agree, or say Yes especially to things that
    they think dont affect them that much.

52
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  •  
  • Response set arises when a respondent think they
    see a pattern of desired answers to survey
    questions, and answers accordingly.
  • To avoid response set, scaling, and the
    randomisation of questions is recommended.
  •  
  • Scaling and randomisation also help prevent
    acquiescence response, and a tendency by people
    to give socially desirable answers.

53
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • The interview method of research is a
    conversation with a purpose.
  • It is non-experimental in design.
  • The interviewer will on a one-to-one basis
    collect detailed personal information from
    individuals using oral questions.
  • The interview is used widely to supplement and
    extend our knowledge about individual(s).

54
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Interviews can give us both quantitative and
    qualitative data about participants thoughts,
    feelings and behaviours. This is due to the
    standardisation and/or free ranging nature of
    questions asked.
  •  
  • The more structured or standardised interview
    questions are, the more able you are to get
    quantitative data.
  •  
  • Quantitative data is reliable and easy to
    analyse.
  •  
  • The less structured and freer ranging the
    interview questions the more qualitative your
    data becomes.

55
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • Qualitative data is difficult to analyse and is
    not as reliable.
  • There are two categories of interview, the
    structured interview and unstructured interview.
  •  
  • The key feature of the structured interview is in
    the pre-planning of all the questions asked.
  •  
  • Structured interviews also allow for replication
    of the interview with others.

56
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • You can then generalise what you find out to the
    population from which your interview sample came.
  •  
  • Structured interviews are conducted in various
    modes face-to-face, by telephone, videophone and
    the Internet.
  •  
  • There are three types of structured interview.
    The structured interview itself, the
    semi-structured interview and the clinical
    interview.

57
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • A major feature, and difference, is the degree to
    which each use standardised and unplanned
    questions. Standardisation helps the reliability
    of your results and conclusions.
  • The more use of unplanned questions, the less
    structured the interview becomes.
  • Spontaneous questioning is more responsive to the
    participant.
  • However spontaneous questioning does not allow
    for generalisation. Spontaneous questions can
    also be accused of generating invalid results and
    conclusions.
  • Thus standardisation v. the free ranging nature
    of questions is both the main advantage and
    disadvantage of the interview method of research,
    in general and in particular

58
INVESTIGATING BEHAVIOUR
  • The observational method of research concerns the
    planned watching, recording, and analysis of
    observed behaviour as it occurs in a natural
    setting.
  • The observational method is non-experimental in
    design.  
  • The absence of an independent variable does not
    allow any cause-effect conclusions to be drawn
    from observational research.
  • Sound evidence is however important to the
    observational method.
  • Indeed, the observational methods key feature is
    a standardised, planned, and systematic approach
    to objectively observe and record behaviour.

59
Investigating Behaviour
  • Observations, which can be overt or covert, are
    of five main types.
  • We have participant observation, non-participant
    observation, structured observation,
    un-structured observation and naturalistic
    observation.
  • Each involves the planned gathering, analysis,
    and interpretation of mostly empirical data on
    observed behaviour.
  • Each observation has its own features, advantages
    and disadvantages.

60
Investigating Behaviour
  • Participant observation, for example, sees the
    researcher take part in the observation of
    behaviour under investigation (Festinger et al
    1965).
  • Non-participant observation sees no involvement
    on the part of the researcher, with recordings of
    observed behaviours being taken from afar.
  •  In addition, there is controlled (e.g Bandura,
    Ainsworth) and naturalistic observation (Junard).
  • The observational method has both advantages and
    disadvantages as a research design in psychology.

61
Investigating Behaviour
  • Covert observations can be problematic regards
    ethics and disclosure.
  • Extraneous/Confounding variables also plague
    observations. These are infinite, and include
    observer bias and the observer effect.
  • Inter-observer reliability and observation
    schedules can be used to limit these problems,

62
Investigating Behaviour
  • Case Studies
  • The case study method of research is a detailed
    in-depth investigation of a single case
    concerning a person, a family, an organisation,
    or an event.
  • Famous examples Genie, Clive Wearing, Phineas
    Gage, Little Hans/Anna O

63
Investigating Behaviour
  • The main advantage of the case study is that it
    can give excellent in-depth, mainly qualitative
    information about a single case happening
    concerning an individual, organisation or animal.
  • It is a very useful research tool that is used to
    investigate one-off phenomenon in a rich and
    detailed way.
  • It treats those whom it investigates with
    respect, and has the welfare of the individual at
    heart. This is one of the reasons why a case
    study is a more appropriate research method to
    use when investigating controversial topics such
    as child abuse etc.

64
Investigating Behaviour
  • Case studies usually give researchers information
    high in ecological validity. What this means is
    that the information a case study generates is
    real.
  • It is an investigation into a happening that has
    an individual self-report on an actual experience
    as it has affected them.
  • In recent years case studies of similar rare
    occurrences have begun to be pooled on a global
    basis. The pooling of information helps
    contribute to our overall knowledge of something
    of unique interest. The study of the paranormal
    is maybe an obvious example?

65
Investigating Behaviour
  • The main disadvantage of the case study method is
    that it is idiographic in orientation. This means
    that because the case study is geared towards the
    individual and the single case, its findings
    cannot consequently be applied to everyone.  
  • As a case study is about a unique happening
    concerning an individual or organisation, any
    generalisation of results and conclusions to the
    population from which the individual or
    organisation comes is impossible.

66
Investigating Behaviour
  • Further, because the case study is about a
    single-case happening they cannot be replicated.
    Replication helps confirm earlier results and
    conclusions.
  • The ability to replicate a case study, to find
    support or otherwise for its earlier results and
    conclusions is impossible.
  • The difficulty in the replication and
    confirmation of results is related to another
    disadvantage to the case study method, its
    subjectivity.

67
Investigating Behaviour
  • A case study gathers in mainly qualitative,
    descriptive information about an individual. This
    information is got from case histories,
    interviews, diaries etc. and is subjective
    because it is based on an individuals personal
    feelings and opinions.
  • Another flaw with subjective self-report data is
    that its worth depends on the individual being
    truthful. We should be circumspect about
    self-reported information for all sorts of
    reasons.

68
Investigating Behaviour
  • The main reason being that we are never entirely
    truthful! We forget things, we miss out things
    that we think are irrelevant, we lie, we are
    economical with the truth, we exaggerate, we
    disclose some things about ourselves and keep
    other things hidden etc. The reliability of
    information got by self-report is therefore
    suspect.
  • The case study can also attract ethical concerns
    regards the privacy of individuals whose life
    histories may be publicized after their death.

69
Investigating Behaviour
  • Confidentiality should also be observed, with
    aliases for participants being used wherever
    possible.  
  • The different elements to the case study also
    attract disadvantages.
  • The unstructured interview forms the main element
    to a number of case studies.
  • Unstructured interviews are prone to interviewer
    bias.
  • Interviewer bias occurs where the interviewer
    subtly communicates expected answers to the
    interviewee, which he or she then gives in
    response to the questions asked.

70
Investigating Behaviour
  • Leading questions can also be a problem in the
    more unstructured of interviews, particularly
    when the interviewer asks spontaneous questions.
     
  • Could these questions be leading the interviewee
    to give an answer that fits the researchers
    theory or idea?
  • The case study then lacks scientific validity. It
    is not an objective, controlled method of
    research and is prone to bias.
  • One final disadvantage is that because it is a
    non-experimental method of research, no
    cause-effect conclusions can be drawn from any
    data generated in a case study.

71
Investigating Behaviour
  • Multi Method
  • Case studies are a good example of using more
    than one research method to investigate behaviour
    e.g. interview, experiment and observational
    methods all used in most case studies.
  • Many other studies involve a combination of
    different methods to investigate a particular
    question e.g. Milgram, Ainsworth, Harlowcan you
    think of any others?

72
Investigating Behaviour
  • Other important research terms
  • Cross-cultural studies- (e.g. strange situation
    studies)- used to see if cultural practices
    affect behaviour. Yet tests may not be valid in
    all cultures (imposed etic- e.g. I.Q. tests)
  • Longitudinal and cross sectional designs-studies
    enable researchers to observe long term effects
    or compare different groups at the same period in
    time (age/gender/profession) e.g. Schaffer and
    Emerson/Van Ijzendoorn and Kroonenberg
  • Longitudinal studies use repeated measures design
    and cross-sectional studies use independent
    measures design.
  • Role-play/Confederates- often used as part of a
    controlled observational study e.g.
    Zimbardo/Milgram

73
Investigating Behaviour
  • The correlation is a statistical technique used
    to indicate the degree of relationship between
    two co-variates.
  • The correlation is not a research method, but a
    research technique.
  • It endeavours to find relationships between two
    co-variates, or independent behaviours,
    situations, or events.

74
Investigating Behaviour
  • A correlation can be positive or negative. A
    positive correlation means that there is a
    positive relationship between the two independent
    co-variates, and that as one increases, so does
    the other.
  • A negative correlation means that there is a
    negative relationship between the two independent
    co-variates, where here an increase in one
    co-variate is related to a decrease in the other.

75
Investigating Behaviour
  • The degree of relationship can be illustrated
    using a descriptive statistic called a
    scattergram.
  •  
  • The scattergrams trend line illustrates the
    strength, direction, and degree of positive or
    negative correlation.

76
Investigating Behaviour
  • Figure 1 Relationship between hours of study and
    exam results

77
Investigating Behaviour
  • The strength of correlation can be further tested
    using an inferential statistic called a
    correlation co-efficient.
  •  
  • Using the likes of Spearmans rho, the nearer rho
    is to 1, the more positive the relationship is
    said to be, while the nearer rho is to 1, the
    more negative the relationship between the
    co-variates is said to be.
  •  
  • A rho of near 0 indicates no relationship between
    the co-variates.

78
Investigating Behaviour
  • Figure 2. Correlation co-efficient

79
Investigating Behaviour
  • The correlation technique is useful because of
    its ability to produce quantifiable data in the
    form of a co-efficient.
  • However, even with a co-efficient be wary of
    correlations.
  •  
  • Correlations can only infer a positive or
    negative relationship between its covariates.
  •  
  • No cause-effect conclusions can be reached.
  • Examples- violence and aggression- bad diet??

80
Investigating Behaviour
  • Yet it does allow us to explore hypotheses that
    cannot be examined directly in a much quicker
    fashion than using an experiment for example.
  • Further research, preferably experimental would
    be needed to determine the nature of the
    relationship in most correlational studies.

81
Investigating Behaviour
  • 1.Create a suitable directional hypothesis for a
    correlational study. (2marks) 
  • Create a suitable non-directional hypotheis for a
    correlational study. (2marks) 
  • Draw a scattergram with best line of fit to
    illustrate the following and indicate the
    correlation coefficient that would best express
    the relationship
  • a)      positive correlation
  • b)      negative correlation
  • c)      no relationship (6 marks)
  • Explain the main advantages and disadvantages of
    the correlational technique. (6 marks)
  • Discuss why some studies are more suitable for
    this method of investigation than
    others. (4 marks)
  • Total 20 marks

82
Investigating Behaviour
  • DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS
  • MEASURES OF CENTRAL TENDENCY
  • MEAN (AVERAGE) SUM OF SCORES/ NUMBER OF SCORES
  • takes into account all scores therefore sensitive
  • what about extreme scores?
  • Can only be used with interval or ratio data
  • Data types-NOIR- nominal (categories e.g.
    favourite football team), ordinal (ordered-list
    of football teams in order of preference),
    interval (data measured using units of equal
    intervals e.g. word recall) and ratio (true 0
    point e.g. in most measures of physical
    quantities temp, height age)

83
Investigating Behaviour
  • MEDIAN (MIDDLE SCORE)SORT SCORES IN ASCENDING
    ORDER AND FIND MIDDLE SCORE
  • (IF EVEN NUMBERS THEN DIVIDE TWO MIDDLE SCORES
    BY 2.
  • unaffected by extreme scores yet less sensitive
    and representative of sample, can be used with
    ordinal data.
  • MODE MOST FREQUENTLY OCCURRING SCORE
  • very easy to calculate yet unreliable as can
    change dramatically
  • useful in situations where other measures of
    central tendency are meaningless e.g nominal
    data
  • e.g. questionnaire response no of
    children

84
Investigating Behaviour
  • MEASURES OF DISPERSION
  • are scores similar to each other (cluster round
    the mean) or spread out?
  • RANGE difference between highest and lowest
    score
  • formula Highest-Lowest
  • easy to calculate and useful way of describing
    data e.g. two data sets could have same mean but
    different range
  • inadequate measure of general spread as only
    concerns two scores
  • STANDARD DEVIATION
  • used to assess the spread of data around the
    mean- it shows the amount og variation in a set
    of scores.
  • More precise as it takes all values into account
    but can still be affected by extreme
    scores.
  • Activity- complete tasks in worksheet

85
Investigating Behaviour
  • 3 ways of describing data- measures of central
    tendency, measures of disperson and visual
    displays (graphs and charts).
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com