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Why are Surveys typically used?
to study behaviors that may be difficult to observe
Survey questions that are descriptive are asking
about frequency of or relationship between behaviors
Survey questions that are predictive are asking
if one behavior can be predicted from another
Survey questions that are casual are asking
what causes specific behaviors to occur
Sources for standardized questionaries'
Health and Psychosocial instruments
Mental Measurements yearbook
PsycTESTS
Close ended response scales
Given a range of responses to choose from, most commonly used
Open ended response scales
more expansive, harder to code
Categories may cause
biases in the way responses are given
double barrled questions
avoid asking two questions together
Nonresponse error
occurs when individuals do not respond
Coverage error
occurs when sample does not represent entire population
Parenthetical Citation
(AUTHOR name)
Narrative citation
Harris and Cook (2020)
a multiple study article will always have
a method section for each study and a results section for each study
Use words when a number is
less than 10
You should also use words when a number
starts the beginning of a sentence
We should use numerical numbers when
the values are greater than ten, numbers are in the abstract, or numbers are in a list
Confidence interval
Provides range of values that population mean likely falls into with a particular level of certainty
WHat is the first question on the flow chart
comparing means or testing relationships
If we are comparing means, what is the next question we must ask
How many sample means?
IF we just have one sample mean we are comparing, what analyses would we conduct
one sample T-test
IF we have two sample means what is the next question we have to ask
within subjects or between subjects
If there are three or more sample means, what statistical analysis would we conduct
ANOVA test
If we have two sample means and our groups are within subjects, what analyses would we conduct?
Paired samples T-test
If we have two sample means and our groups are between subjects, what analyses would we conduct
Independent samples T-test
If we are comparing relationships, what is the next question we must ask
are these ratio/interval or nominal/ordinal
If they are Ratio/interval, we would ask are they
descriptive or predictive
If they are descriptive we would conduct a
Pearson r test
If they are predictive we would conduct a
Regression test
If the relationships are measured using a nominal or ordinal scale then we would conduct a
Chi-Square test
Variable used for prediction is called
a predictor variable
Correlational designs are made to address
descriptive and predictive research questions
The variable being predicted in a correlational study is called the
outcome variable
Casual relationships can
not be tested with correlational studies
Descriptive studies
describes relationships between variables
Predictive studies
Use one variable to predict another variable
when should an Ampersand be used in reporting research
use for citations enclosed in parentheses
What is the first section of an APA style article
title page
What is the second section of an APA style article
Abstract
What is the third section of an APA style article
introduction
What is the fourth section of an APA style article
Methods
What is typically included within the methods section
Participants, design, materials, and procedures
What is the fifth section of an APA style article
Results
What is the sixth section of an APA style article
Discussion
What is the seventh section of an APA style article
references
What is the eighth section of an APA style article
Tables and figures
What should be in the header of APA papers
running header and page number
What should be included on a title page
title of the article, authors' names, authors' affiliations centered on the page
What should be included in an abstract
Short paragraph (~150-250 words) describing the four major sections of your article
What should be included on the introduction
The general topic of your study Past relevant studies/background info, Research question of your study (whatproblem/question does your study plan toaddress?), Hypotheses
What is the purpose of the procedures section
Experience of participants in the study in chronological order
Any statistic is
sample mean difference over sampling error
Passive vs Active Voice
Active voice uses a subject, while passive voice does not
Psychometrics
validation and refinement of surveys to measure psychological constructs
How to conduct a good closed response scale
The positive and negative scale should be even
Construct Validity
the extent to which variables measure what they are supposed to measure
Leading Question
a question worded to lead a respondent to give a desired answer
Face Validity
Does it intuitively make sense?
Coverage e
the error that occurs when the sampling frame does not match the target population
Citerion
a measure of validity based on showing a substantial correlation
Test-retest
Checked by getting same participant to take a survey twice
Attrition
participants who do not complete the entire study
Testing Effect
Taking a test once influences responses the second time
Internal Consistency of Scores
Tests relationships between scores on different items of a survey
Split-Half Reliability
Indicates if scores are similar on different questions that address similar topics
Cronbach's Alpha
Indicates average correlation between scores on all pairs of items
How do you decrease nonresponse error?
By increasing the number of participants