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Experimental Design

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Experimental Design Week 9 Lecture 1 Agenda Purpose of experimental design Key elements in experimental design Various types of experimental design Causal-comparative ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Experimental Design


1
Experimental Design
  • Week 9 Lecture 1

2
Agenda
  • Purpose of experimental design
  • Key elements in experimental design
  • Various types of experimental design
  • Causal-comparative design
  • Field and controlled laboratory experiment

3
Purpose of experimental design
  • Examine the possible influences that one factor
    or condition may have on another factor or
    condition
  • Build on positivist approach
  • Research questions appropriate for an experiment
  • Issues that have a narrow scope or small scale
  • Can rarely address question that may require
    looking at conditions across an entire society or
    across decade
  • Small number of participants (subjects) compared
    with survey research

4
Independent variables
  • Independent variable
  • Cause
  • Research measure (manipulate) independent
    variable by creating a condition or situation
  • Manipulation of independent variable create
    different treatments.
  • Event manipulation
  • Affecting the independent variable by altering
    the events that subjects experience
  • Presence versus absence
  • Instructional manipulation
  • Varying the independent variable by giving
    different sets of instructions to the subjects

5
Dependent variables
  • Effect (outcome)
  • Physical conditions, behaviors, attitudes,
    feelings, or beliefs of subjects that change in
    response to a treatment.
  • How to measure
  • Questionnaire, interviews
  • Observation
  • Test
  • Direct outcome

6
The importance of control
  • Internal validity -- The extent to which we can
    accurately state that the independent variable
    produced the observed effect

7
Strategies to achieve control
  • Keep some things constant
  • What are variables that need to be held constant
    in most experiments?
  • Include a control group
  • Treatment group (experimental group)
  • Between-subjects design
  • Randomly assign people to groups
  • Use matched pairs
  • Matched-subject design
  • Expose participants to both or all treatment
    conditions
  • Within group design

8
Between and matched-subjects design
9
Steps in conducting an experiment
  • State hypotheses
  • Decide on an experimental design
  • Decide the way to manipulate independent
    variables
  • Develop a valid and reliable measure for
    dependent variable
  • Pilot testing the treatment and dependent
    variable measures
  • Recruit subjects (or locate cases)
  • Assign subject to groups
  • Introduce treatment to treatment groups
  • Gather data for measure of the dependent
    variables
  • Hypotheses testing

10
Mini-workshop
  • Identify the IV and DV in the following
    hypotheses
  • Adults find it easier to remember a list of
    meaningful words than to remember a list of
    nonsense syllables
  • Nationality of salesperson will affect customers
    intention to buy a foreign made product
  • Perceptions of the characteristics of the good
    or effective teacher are in part determined by
    the perceivers attitudes toward education.
  • Determine how might you manipulate the IV and
    measure the DV

11
Design elements and notations
  • Observations or Measures
  • Symbolized by O in design notation
  • Treatments or Programs
  • A manipulated independent variable
  • Symbolized by X in design notation
  • Time
  • Used to indicate the time you make the
    observation or take the measure
  • Time moves from left to right. Elements that are
    listed on the left occur before elements that are
    listed on the right
  • Assignment to group
  • R random assignment
  • N Nonequivalent groups
  • C assignment by cutoff

12
Classic true experimental design
  • pretest-posttest
  • Treatment Versus control group
  • Randomized
  • Experimental design

http//trochim.human.cornell.edu/kb/desintro.htm
13
Pre-experimental design
  • One-shot case study
  • Result usually not valid
  • Seldom used in serious research
  • One-group pretest-posttest design
  • Some effect after the treatment
  • Can not rule out alternative explanations for the
    effect
  • Static group comparison
  • Any posttest outcome difference between the
    groups could be due to group differences prior to
    the experiment instead of to the treatment

14
Quasi-experimental design
  • Non-equivalent control group design
  • What does the term nonequivalent mean?
  • Assignment to group was not random
  • The groups may be different prior to the study
  • Susceptible to internal validity threat of
    selection
  • Selection bias groups were not comparable before
    the study

15
Time-series design
  • Interrupted time-series design
  • Why do we use time-series design
  • Difficult to find an equivalent group of subjects
    to serve as a control group
  • Single group pretest-posttest design is
    susceptible to lots of internal validity threat

16
An example
  • Research question
  • The impact of distance learning on university
    students learning outcome and cognitive skills
  • Units of analysis college students
  • Independent variables
  • Distance learning (2 level)
  • Dependent variables
  • Learning outcome
  • Cognitive skills

17
An example (cont)
  • Hypotheses
  • H1. Students using distance learning system will
    achieve better learning outcome than students
    with traditional classroom learning do
  • H2. The cognitive skills of students using
    distance learning system will be lower than those
    of students with traditional classroom learning
  • Experimental design?
  • Subject recruitment?
  • Manipulation of independent variable
  • Measurement of dependent variables

18
Causal-comparative designs
  • What can we do if we are not able to manipulate
    the independent variable
  • Consider the following hypotheses
  • Girls who follow science courses in Year 12 are
    more aggressive than girls following non-science
    courses.
  • Working class children will learn nonsense
    syllables slower than middle-class children
  • Causal-comparative designs provide the means by
    which a research can examine how specific IVs
    (personal trait, history of family violence, etc)
    affect the dependent variable (s) of interest

19
Causal-comparative designs (cont)
  • Look at conditions that have already occurred and
    then collects data to investigate a possible
    relationship between these conditions and
    dependent variables of interest (ex post facto
    research)
  • Difference between causal-comparative design and
    correlational design
  • Less able to draw firm conclusion about cause and
    effect

20
Field and controlled laboratory experiment
  • Field experiment
  • Experiments conducted in real-life or field
    settings
  • Researcher has less control over the experimental
    condition
  • Greater external validity but lower internal
    validity
  • Controlled laboratory experiment
  • Conducted under controlled conditions of a
    laboratory
  • Greater internal validity but lower external
    validity
  • Practical consideration
  • Planning and pilot testing
  • Instruction to subjects
  • Post experiment interview
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