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Experimental Research

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Experimental Research Attempts to Establish Cause and Effect Relationships – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Experimental Research


1
Experimental Research
Attempts to Establish Cause and Effect
Relationships
2
Cause and Affect Cannot exist unless two
variables are correlated
  • i.e. evaluate if two variables are correlated
    before trying to manipulate one to change the
    other.

3
The Logic
  • Cause and Effect can only be established if there
    is no other reasonable explanation for the
    changes in the dependent variable except the
    manipulation of the independent variable

4
Important Factors
  • Good theoretical framework
  • Appropriate experimental design
  • Correct statistical model Design
  • Proper selection Control of Independent
    variable
  • Appropriate selection Measurement of dependent
    variable
  • Use of appropriate subjects
  • Correct interpretation of results

5
Internal Validity
  • The extent to which the results of the study can
    be attributed to the treatments used in the study.

Requirement without which study is
uninterpretable.
6
External Validity
  • Generalizability of the study results.

7
Strong internal validity may be at odds to strong
external validity
  • In real-world settings everything is not
    controlled and may not operate in the same way as
    the laboratory.

8
The Dilemma!!!
  • Is it more important to ascertain that the
    manipulation of the independent variable caused
    the observed changes in the dependent variable...
    Or, is it more important to generalize the
    results to other populations?

9
Threats to Internal ValidityCampbell Stanley
(1963)
10
  • History Events occurring during the experiment
    that are not a part of the treatment.i.e.
    Evaluating effects of semester-long fitness
    program on 8th graders. 60 of students also
    participated in recreational soccer will affect
    results.

11
  • MaturationProcesses within the subjects that
    operate as a result of time passing. Occurs most
    frequently when one group is tested several times
    over a long period of time. i.e. Fatigue,
    again, hunger. Fitness testing in fall and
    spring--students do better in spring.

12
  • TestingThe effects of one test on subsequent
    administrations of the same test. i.e. Giving
    test knowledge about Performance enhancing drugs
    to students today and re-testing two days later.

13
  • InstrumentationChanges in the instrument
    calibration, including lack of agreement within
    and between observers.Same observer may
    systematically vary rating across time or
    subjects (observer drift) or different observers
    may not rate the same performance the same way.
    (i.e. Skin Fold Study)

14
  • Statistical RegressionThe fact that Groups
    selected on the basis of extreme scores are not
    as extreme on subsequent testing.May occur when
    groups are not randomly formed but selected on
    some extreme score on a measure. (i.e. observing
    active and inactive behaviors. In other settings
    may regress toward the mean.)

15
  • Selection BiasIdentification of comparison
    groups in other than a random manner. Occurs when
    groups are not randomly assigned.Did the study
    use volunteers? Are subjects extremely
    non-representative of the population?

16
  • Experimental MortalityLoss of subjects from
    comparison groups due to nonrandom reasons.Loss
    of subjects from the treatment groups.

17
  • Selection-Maturation InteractionSpecific to
    non-equivalent group designs where the passage of
    time might affect one group but not the
    other.i.e. Difference between expert and novice
    tennis payers. Experts might have higher
    socio-economic status, access to country clubs,
    and better instruction.

18
Additional Threat
  • ExpectancyResearchers anticipating certain
    subjects will perform better.i.e. Rating
    subjects labeled as skilled better than those
    labeled as unskilled regardless of the
    treatment.

19
Threats to External ValidityCampbell Stanley
(1963)
20
  • 1) Reactive or Interactive Effects of
    TestingFact that the pretest may make the
    subject more aware of or sensitive to the
    upcoming treatment. Results in treatments not
    being as effective without the pretest.

21
  • Interaction of Selection Biases and the
    Experimental TreatmentWhen a group is selected
    on some characteristic, the treatment may work
    only on groups possessing that characteristic.

22
  • Reactive Effects of Experimental
    ArrangementsTreatments that are effective in
    very constrained situations (labs) may not be
    effective in less constrained (real-world)
    settings.

23
  • Multiple-Treatment InterferenceWhen subjects
    receive more than one treatment, the effects of
    previous treatments may influence subsequent ones.

24
Controlling Threats
25
Internal Validity
  • RandomizationControls For1) History (up
    until experiment)2) Maturation3) Statistical
    Regression4) selection Biases5) Selection
    Maturation Interaction

26
  • Test ReliabilityInstrumental cannot be
    controlled or evaluated by any design only
    experimenter can control.Psychometrics
    Establishing appropriate instrumentation.

27
  • Subject RetentionCannot be controlled by
    experimental design. Careful discussions about
    importance of study with subjects.

28
  • Placebos, Blind, Double-Blind SetupsPlacebo
    is treatment effect real or due to psychological
    effects?Blind Study Subject does not know
    whether receiving treatment or control.Double-Bl
    ind Neither subject or Researcher knows who is
    receiving treatment or control.

29
External Validity
  • Random selection is the key.Random selection of
    subjects, treatments, and experimental situations.
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