Psyc012 Good Measurement And Surveys

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56 Terms

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Conceptual definition

The first step in measuring happiness, defining the concept in abstract terms.

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Operational definition

The next step in measuring happiness, specifying how the concept will be measured.

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Self-report measure

A method of measuring happiness through questionnaires.

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Single item

A self-report measure asking, 'How happy are you?'

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Multi-item scale

A self-report measure that includes multiple questions to assess happiness.

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Satisfaction with Life Scale

A specific multi-item self-report measure developed by Diener.

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Subjective Happiness Scale

A specific multi-item self-report measure developed by Lyubomirsky.

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Observational measure

A method of measuring happiness by observing behavior.

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Physiological assessment

A method of measuring happiness through biological indicators.

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Nominal scale

A scale where values are just labels or categories, e.g., 'Are you happy? (1 = yes, 0 = no)'.

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Ordinal scale

A scale that involves rank ordering, e.g., 'Rank order the happiness of your closest friends.'

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Interval scale

A scale with equal differences between numbers but no true zero point, e.g., 'How happy are you? (1 = not at all...7 = very)'.

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Ratio scale

An interval scale that includes a true zero, e.g., 'How many times did you feel happy today?'.

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Validity

The degree to which a measure accurately represents the construct being measured.

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Reliability

The degree to which a measure is consistent, stable, and dependable.

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Correlation coefficient (r)

A measure of the strength and direction of association between two variables.

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Test-retest reliability

Consistency of a measure over time, relevant when the construct should be stable.

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Inter-rater reliability

Consistency of a measure across different observers.

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Internal reliability

Consistency across scale items in self-report measures that assess the same construct.

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Observed happiness

A measure of happiness assessed through observation.

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Trait-level happiness

A stable measure of happiness assessed over time.

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Cronbach's alpha

A statistic used to assess internal reliability, wanting it to be greater than .70.

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Subjective happiness scale range

Ranges from .79 to .94.

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Construct validity

How well did the researcher operationalize each variable?

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Face validity

Does the measure seem plausible given the construct of interest, usually determined by experts.

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Content validity

Does the measure capture all parts of the construct of interest, also determined by experts.

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Criterion validity

Is the measure related to relevant objective outcomes, determined by correlations between scores on your measure and objective outcomes.

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Known groups paradigm

A method where groups known to be different are given the measure to assess validity.

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Convergent validity

Is the measure related to other measures that assess similar constructs, determined by correlations with other subjective, related measures.

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Discriminant validity

Is the measure NOT related to other measures that assess different constructs, looking for weak correlations.

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Categorical (nominal scale)

A type of measurement that classifies data into distinct categories.

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Quantitative (interval, ordinal, ratio)

Types of measurements that involve numerical values and can be measured on a scale.

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Objective measures

Data collected through observable and measurable methods.

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Subjective measures

Data collected through personal opinions, interpretations, feelings, or beliefs.

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Self-reports

Data collected from individuals about their own thoughts, feelings, or behaviors.

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Observational measures

Data collected through observing subjects in their natural environment.

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Physiological measures

Data collected through biological or physical assessments.

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What is a key consideration when writing questions for self-report measures?

High construct validity involves many small decisions.

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What are open-ended questions in self-report measures?

Questions that allow participants to respond in their own ways, such as 'Tell us about your views on legalizing marijuana.'

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What is a primary advantage of open-ended questions?

They allow participants to express what is important to them.

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What is a disadvantage of open-ended questions?

They may not cover the topics the researcher cares about and can be time-consuming.

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What are closed-ended questions?

Questions that provide specific rating dimensions of interest, such as 'Are you in favor of legalization?'

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What is a forced choice question?

A type of closed-ended question where participants choose between two options, e.g., 'Yes or No.'

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What is a Likert scale?

A closed-ended question format that asks participants to rate their agreement on a scale, e.g., 'I favor legalizing marijuana.'

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What is a semantic differential scale?

A closed-ended question format that asks participants to rate a concept on a scale between two opposing adjectives, e.g., 'Legalizing marijuana is... Foolish to Wise.'

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What should be avoided when phrasing questions?

Leading questions, double-barreled questions, and negatively worded questions.

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What is a leading question?

A question that makes one answer seem clearly better than another, e.g., 'Do you think it's about time for marijuana to finally be legalized?'

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What is a double-barreled question?

A question that asks two questions at once, e.g., 'Do you think that legalizing marijuana will decrease the crime rate and lead to a happier, healthier population?'

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Why should negatively worded questions be avoided?

They make questions more cognitively difficult, e.g., 'I do not believe that marijuana should not be legalized.'

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How can question order affect self-report measures?

Responses on earlier questions can influence how later questions are interpreted.

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What is acquiescence in self-report measures?

The tendency for participants to answer 'yes' or 'agree' to most questions without careful thought.

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What is a solution to the acquiescence problem?

Include reverse-scored items in the questionnaire.

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What is fence sitting in survey responses?

The tendency for participants to stay close to the middle of the scale.

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How can fence sitting be mitigated?

Use an even number of scale points to eliminate a mid-point.

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What is social desirability in self-report measures?

The concern over the impression one's responses might convey, leading to less accurate answers.

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What are some solutions to address social desirability concerns?

Assure anonymity, include a social desirability scale, and use surreptitious measures.