define operationalisation
operationalisation is the process by which a researcher defines how a concept is measured, observed or manipulated within a particular study.
for example, social anxiety can be operationally defined in terms of self-rating scores, behavioural avoidance of crowded places or physical anxiety symptoms in social situations.
define aim
the aim of the study tells us what the study is investigating
stated before the research begins to make it clear what the study intends to investigate
define experimental method
the manipulation of the IV to see its effect on the DV
define counterbalancing
to make half of the participant sample experience the different conditions of the experiment in one order, and the other half of the participants complete it in the opposite order
define demand characteristics
how can demand characteristics be controlled?
deception
define double blind
define single blind
define behavioural categories
devising a set of component behaviours
define event sampling
counting the number of times a certain behaviour or event occurs in a target individual
define time sampling
recording behaviours in a given time frame e.g. noting what an individual is doing every 30 seconds
define inter-rater reliability
the test should give consistent results regardless of who administers it
this can be assessed by correlating the scores that each researcher produces and comparing them
should be around 80% agreement
how can inter-rater reliability be improved?
standardise the experiment
define social desirability bias
how does social desirability affect validity?
creates bias
what is a pilot study?
a small scale version of an investigation that takes place before the real investigation is conducted
what is the purpose of a pilot study?
the aim is to check that procedures, materials, measuring scales etc. work to allow the researcher to make changes or modifications if necessary
what are investigator effects?
what is researcher bias?
how can you avoid investigator effects or researcher bias?
not allowing either the participants or the researcher to know the aim of the research
The Hawthorne effect
reliability
the overall consistency of a measure
external reliability
refers to the ability of the test to produce the same results each time its carried out
test-retest
a person repeats a test a month or so after doing the test the first time