Define validity
When it measures what it claims to measure
What’s external validity about
External validity is about applying/generalising the results of a study
What are the 3 types of external validity
What’s low ecological validity
When results cannot be generalised to behaviour in the real world, as the study environment isn’t reflective of real life
What’s low population validity
When results cannot be generalised to the target population as the sample isn’t representative enough of the target population
What’s low temporal validity
When results cannot be generalised to modern day behaviour
What’s internal validity about
Whether or not the study has been conducted accurately, whether data has been collected accurately, and whether or not the study has measured what it thought it measured
There are 5 threats to internal validity
How and why do Situational variables threaten internal validity
How could this be overcome
Overcome by all participants having same environment conditions (standardised procedures)
How and why do Participant variables threaten internal validity
How could this be overcome
Overcome by using Same participants in both conditions of IV (repeated measures), or match upon certain criteria (matched pairs)
How and why does investigator bias threaten internal validity
How could this be overcome
Overcome by using a double blind strategy
How and why do demand characteristics threaten internal validity
How could this be overcome
Overcome by using deception- hide aim from participants
How and why does Social desirability bias threaten internal validity
How could this be overcome
Overcome by making questionnaires anonymous, or study people without their knowledge (covert observations)
What’s the 2 ways of checking validity
- Face validity
What’s concurrent validity
How’s it done
Concurrent validity is a check that the measuring tool you are using is equal to an existing validated measuring tool
What’s face validity
How’s it done
Face validity is whether a test, scale or measure appears “on the face of it” to measure the thing it’s supposed to measure
Two ways of checking reliability of a study
1) test-retest = doing a study/experiment and then repeating, 2 weeks later for example
2) inter-rater reliability (inter-observer)= having two researchers/observers so they can check each others scores afterwards
What’s the order of a psychology report
8 things
1) Abstract
2) Introduction
3) Method
4) Results
5) Discussion
6) Conclusion
7) References
8) Appendices
What does the abstract include
What does the introduction include
What does the method include
What does the results include
What does the discussion include
What’s a critical value
The values in the statistical tables, which determines significance