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Naturalistic Observation and Case-Study Research

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Title: Naturalistic Observation and Case-Study Research


1
Naturalistic Observationand Case-Study Research
  • Psyc 50
  • Chapter 6

2
Naturalistic Observation Examples
  • Charles Darwins voyage on the HMS Beagle (the
    basis for his theory of natural selection)
  • Jane Goodall's study of chimpanzees
  • Dian Fosseys study of the mountain gorilla
  • Adeline Levines study of the Love Canal
  • Rosenhans study of psychiatric hospitalization

3
Case-Study Examples
  • Sigmund Freuds study of patients, which formed
    the basis for his psychoanalytic theory
  • E. L. Witmers study of children in the first
    psychology clinic in North America
  • Jean Piagets study of the development of
    children, which led to numerous theories of child
    development

4
When to use low-constraint methods
  • For questions involving the natural flow of
    behavior
  • When first studying a new research area
  • When testing the feasibility of a procedure
  • To test the generalizability of laboratory
    findings

5
Problem Statementsand Hypotheses
  • Problem statements are often general and flexible
    in low-constraint research studies
  • Often evolve to accommodate new results
  • Unable to test causal hypotheses with
    low-constraint research

6
Value of these methods
  • Provide new descriptive information
  • Can negate a general proposition
  • Provide information about contingencies

7
Challenge of Low-Constraint Research
  • Can be very difficult to observe behavior in
    natural surroundings
  • Often we are not sure what behaviors are
    important until after we have observed for a
    while
  • Without the controls of the laboratory,
    participants are free to do what they want to do,
    and not what we are hoping to observe

8
Making Observations
  • Unobtrusive observation observing behavior
    without participants knowledge
  • Participant observation observing behavior
    while participating in the situation
  • Want to reduce measurement reactivity
  • People behaving differently when observed
  • Reactive measures enhance reactivity
  • Nonreactive measures minimize reactivity

9
Sampling
  • Sampling of participants
  • Representative samples allow us to generalize
    findings to the larger group
  • Sampling is often not under the control of the
    researcher in low-constraint research
  • Therefore, caution is required in interpreting
    the results
  • Generalize only to similar participants and NOT
    to the general population

10
Sampling
  • Sampling of participants
  • Sampling of situations
  • Sampling in different situations will help us
    know what situational factors affect behavior

11
Sampling
  • Sampling of participants
  • Sampling of situations
  • Sampling of behaviors
  • Repeated sampling of behavior in a specific
    situation will indicate the consistency of the
    behavior

12
Evaluating the Data
  • The data from low-constraint research is a rich
    set of information
  • Must be cautious in interpreting data from
    low-constraint research
  • Limitations
  • Poor representativeness
  • Poor replicability
  • Ex post facto fallacy
  • Limitations of the observer
  • Going beyond the data

13
Poor Representativeness
  • Small samples non-randomly selected
  • Rarely do the samples represent the population
  • Dangerous to generalize findings to the general
    population

14
Poor Replicability
  • Studies can be replicated only if
  • The procedures are clearly specified
  • The procedures were followed exactly
  • In low-constraint research
  • Procedures are often not specified
  • They may change as the study continues
  • They are often unique to the observer
  • Therefore, replication is very difficult

15
Ex Post Facto Fallacy
  • Interpreting an observed contingency as if it
    represented a causal connection
  • Low-constraint observation will never provide the
    controls for such strong conclusions
  • If ex post facto conclusions are interpreted as
    hypotheses for further research, and not as
    established facts, then they serve a useful
    scientific purpose

16
Limitations of the Observer
  • Low-constraint studies often rely on the
    observational skills of the researcher
  • Ex. specificity of observation procedures
  • Specific procedures decrease flexibility
  • Non-specific procedures increase possibility of
    experimenter biases (experimenter reactivity)

17
Going Beyond the Data
  • One must be careful in drawing strong conclusions
    (dont over-interpret)
  • Interpretation should take into account other
    information we know about a phenomenon
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