Chapter 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three types of claims?

A

Frequency, association, and causal

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2
Q

What are the four big validities?

A
  1. Construct validity - how well a conceptual variable is oeprationalised
  2. Statistical validity - the extent to which a study’ statistical conclusions are precise, reasonable and replicable
  3. External validity - how well the results of a study generalise to people/contexts behind those in the original study
  4. Internal validity - to what extent one variable has a relationship with another, rather than some other factor
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3
Q

Which validities are the most relevant for the three types of claims?

A
  1. Frequency - construct validity, external validity and statistical validity.
  2. Association - construct validity, external validity and statistical validity.
  3. Causal - whether it was conducted as an experiment > internal validity and temporal precedence. Construct validity, external validity and statistical validity.
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4
Q

What kind of research study is required to support a causal claim?

A

Experimental study

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5
Q

What are variables?

A

Variables are concepts of interest that have at least 2 levels:
1. Variables can be measured/manipulated
2. Variables can be described (Conceptual variables - elements of a theory. Operational definitions - specific measures or manipulations to study concepts)

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6
Q

What are frequency claims?

A

Claims that make arguments about the level of a single measured variable in a group of people

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7
Q

What are association claims?

A

Claims that argue that 2 variables are related to each other. They are usually supported by correlational studies, where all variables are measured and used to predict the other variable with one of them

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8
Q

What are causal claims?

A

Claims that state that one variable is responsible for changes in the other variable. There needs to be covariance, temporal precedence and internal validity to support a causal claim - therefore requiring an experimental study.

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9
Q

How do researchers determine what validities they should prioritize?

A

In making a causal statement, internal validity is key - at the expense of external validity.

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10
Q

What is covariance and temporal precedence?

A
  1. Covariance - the extent to which two variable are observed to go together
  2. Temporal precedence - when the method was designed so that the causal variable clearly comes first in time before the effect variable.
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