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bias
opinions or feelings about a specifc group of people or issue
scientific bias
tendency (conscious or subconscious) to favor some results over others
selection bias
were the participants clearly defined?
assignment bias
were groups significantly different as a result of assignment process?
performance bias
were participants aware of what group they were in?
detection bias
were those individuals measuring change aware of what group the participant was assigned?
attrition bias
did participants drop out of the study before completion of data collection?
reporting bias
authors more likely to publish positive findings
publication bias
positive findins are more likely to be published by journals
responsible conduct of research
ethical guidelines for how scientific research should be conducted and dissemated
institutional review board
reviews whether the research is ethical and to protect the participants of research as weel as the researchers
minimal risk
procedures that people regularly encounter during ordinary life (non-invasive, existing documents, anonymous surveys)
more than minimal risk
procedures that can cause stress, pain, injury, or death (vulnerable populations, invasive procedures, physical or emotional discomfort)
basic and applied research
to provide new information or to apply the knowledge in some way to change a behavior
laboratory and field research
lab is more controlled and easier to manipulate variables, field is on location
experimental research
random participant conditions, researchers control/manipulate conditions
quasi-experimental research
evaluate interventions, participants not randomized conditions
non-experimental research
no group comparison, no randomization, no measurement before comparison
independent variable
variable that is manipulated
specific trtmnt/condition/factor that is intentionally manipulated/changed/selected to see if it causes an effect
dependent variable
variable studied for change
ultimate outcome/behavior/respons that is measured and observed by researcher to determine if any changes occurred
continuous variables
range of mathematical properties
categorical variables
range of non-mathematical properties, but of categories (young, old)
internal validity
degree to which the relationship btwn independent and dependent variable is observed w/out influence of extraneous variables
external validity
generalizability of research results to other participants and settings
population validity
characteristics of participants chosen for the study are too narrow or specific, meaning results cannot be generalized to the broader real-world population
ecological validity
artificial environment of the study or participants' awareness that they are being observed causes them to behave differently than they would in a natural, everyday setting
effect size
measures the magnitude of treatment effect, independent of sample size (notated with "d"), tells how much difference a trtmnt makes
hawthorne effect
participants alter behavior simply bc they know they're being observed
observer/experimenter expectancy effect
researcher's expectations or beliefs about study's findings subconsciously influence participants' behaviors or the interpretation of results
john henry effect
experimental bias where control group, aware they are being compared to an experimental group, works harder to outperform the experimental group
halo effect
initial positive impression of a person/produce/brand based on a single characteristic, influences judgment of other unrelated traits in a positive direction
nocebo effect
describes negative outcomes that occur bc a person expects to experience them, even if the treatment or intervention is inert
social desirability bias
tendenct of respondents to answer questions in a way that will be viewed favorably by others, often presenting themselves in a positive light
implementation science
research addresses the complex, real-world variables in practice settings by investigating barriers to and solutions for delivery of sustainable, effective protocols that will maximize positive outcomes for a large number of consumers
dissemination
intentional and systematic spread of information about evidence-based interventions to specific target audiences; aim is to increase knowledge, awareness, and understanding of the intervention and its potential benefits
fidelity
degree of which an intervention is implemented as intended by its developers or prescribed in a protoco.
feasibility
extent to which and intervention can be successfully implemented or acrrried out withing a particular setting or context
penetration
measures the extent to which an EBI is integrated or saturated within a service setting and its various subsystems, often expressed as a ratio
filtered evidence
not new data, but a review of existing data
scoping review
type of literature review that aims to identify and map the existing evidence of a particular topic; explores broad topics, identifies research gaps, clarifies concepts
systematic review
research paper that collects all possible studies related to a topic; reviews quality of the papers, analyzes results
critical appraised topic
rapid review particularly useful for informing research and practice, faster than a systematic review used in EPB to assist decision-making
normal distribution
distribution or bell curve that describes a continuous probability distribution
homogenity of variance
assumption in statistical tests
parametric
interval or ratio data, large sample size, normal distribution, homogeneity of variance
nonparametic
small sample size, not normal distribution, don't assume homogeneity of variance
sampling error
natural, accidental difference btwn small group you study and the bigger group you want to help (sample size to population)
qualitative
exploring concepts, experiences, meanings through non-numerical data
understanding "why" and "how"
quantitative
measuring variables and testing hypotheses using numerical data
focuses on "how many/much" or "to what extent"
randomized control trial
experimental study design that minimizes bias by randomization, blinding, and a control group; used to assess effectiveness of intervention; highest level of experimental evidence
correlation study
important for understanding rltnshps btwn variables and identifying associations, not highest level of evidence bc does not establish causality
correlation
is there a relationship btwn x and y, and how strong?
regression
what is the relationship btwn x and y?
survey
used to collect data; questionnaires or interview questions
single-subject design
intense study of a person or small group of individuals
multiple baseline design
staggered introduction, demonstrates causation, can baseline across settings or behaviors
single-subject design
alternating treatment design
used to rapidly compare the effects of 2+ distinct interventions on a single target behavior
qualitative research approaches
ethnography
grounded thepry
phenomenology
ethnography
participant observation/interviews, flexible and exploratory, explanation from viewpoint of participant, cultural immersion over time
grounded theory
used to allow theories to emerge based on the data, coding, or categorization of data
phenomenology
homogeneous participants, semi-structured interview, broad questions, identify themes
quantitative research methods
case study
focus groups
participation action
discourse analysis
critical discourse analysis
case study
qualitative or quantitative, one case (person or agency)
focus group
group data via interview method facilitated by researcher, 6-10 strangers with shared features or interest, non-threatening enviro, planned discussion
participation action research
collaborative approach to research that emphasizes community involvement, social change, and shared learning; conducted with ppl, not on them
discourse analysis
focuses on how lang is used in text, conversation, media, and other forms of communication; how meaning is constructed through lang, how ppl use lang in diff contexts, and structure/patterns of communication
ctricital discourse analysis
focuses on specific branch of discourse that focuses on why lnag works and who it benefits, used to reinforce or challenge social inequalities, rooted in critical theory and is more politically/socially engaged
triangulation in qualitative research
strat to enhance credibility, trustworthiness, and validity of research findings by using multiple methods, data sources, theories, or investigators to study a single phenomenon
investigator triangulation
multiple researchers analyzing the same data independently, then comparing and discussing interpretations to reduce indiv biases
data triangulation
multiple data sources to examine the same phenomenon, like conducting interviews, surveys, and observations
methodological triangulation
multiple research methods to study the same phenomenon (combining interviews with participant observation or use both qual/quant methods to analyze the data)
theory triangulation
multiple theoretical frameworks to analyze data, enriching the interp and identifying potential gaps/limitations in existing theories
convergent design or mixed-method research
collect both quantitative and qualitative at same time, analyze separately, merge results
explanatory sequential design of mixed-method research
collect quantitative BEFORE qualitative
exploratory sequential design of mixed-method research
collect qualitative BEFORE quantitative
validity
accuracy and meaningfulness of measurements
face validity
whether test appears to measure what it's supposed to
content validity
extent to which the test adequately samples the content area being measured
construct validity
how well a test measures the theoretical construct or concept it's designed to assess
criterion-related validity
how will the test relates to other relevant measures or outcomes (concurrent and predictive)
concurrent validity
how well a test relates to a criterion measure administered at the same time
predictive validity
how well the test predicts future performance on a related criterion
reliability
consistency and reproducibility of measurements
test-retest reliability
consistency of results when the same test is administered at diff times to the same indiv
inter-rater reliability
consistency of results when diff examiners administer or score the same assessment
internal consistency
degree to which diff times within a test are measuring the same underlying construct
sensitivity
rate at which a test correctly identifies indiv who HAS disorder
specificity
rate at which a test correctly identifies indiv who DOESN'T have disorder
regression to the mean
if an initial measurement is exceptionally high or low (extreme), subsequent measurements are likely to be closer to the average, even if no real change or intervention has occured