Lecture 2- Human Research Flashcards
Exam 1
How do we know trends in drug use/misuse?
Research
Why is it important to know the different methods for conducting research?
Because different methods ask different questions and yield different answers. You can get better answers from asking different questions
What are the 4 main types of human-based research?
- Case studies
- Naturalistic observation
- Laboratory studies
- Surveys
What are case studies and what is wrong with them?
- Case studies are interview-based
- Have a lack of scientific controls (no “normal” comparison)
- Biased by population (ex. rehab center)
naturalistic obervation
Observation-based (observer-biased)
-Lack of controls
-real behavior vs. interpretation
Laboratory studies
- Limited by recruitment pool (ex. college students)
- Lack of controls
- Ex. alcohol lab and imaging techniques
Imaging techniques
- A type of laboratory study
- Includes MRI (brain anatomy) and f MRI (brain function) and PET
- PET (positron emission tomography) is where some kind of labeled marker is injected into the bloodstream and can be visualized using an imaging technique
- Can attach to a thing of interest like dopamine (dopamine D2 receptors in addicts are lower than controls)
Surveys
self reports that includes clinical and general population
Clinical populations issues w surveys
- Differences between patients and non-patients affect the information provided in surveys
- Denial and lying can skew data
How can you maximize accuracy in surveys (clinical populations)
- written assurance of confidentiality
- a setting that encourages honesty
- drug free
- clearly worded, objective questions
- memory aids
Concerns about general population surveys
- Are they accurate?
- Are they the relative perspective or the absolute?
Three general population surveys examples
- The national survey on drug use and health
- Drug abuse warning network
- Monitoring the future
The National Survey on Drug Use and Health (formerly called the National Household Survey)
- Goal: establish overall prevalence of use in lifetime, past year, and past month for a variety of substances
- Data provided by Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
- One of the biggest surveys in the US, done yearly
- Data is viewed as pretty solid
- High generalizability
What does prevalence mean
general ocurance of an event, the % of the population affected by the event, overall rate of cases, both old and new
What does incidence mean
Rate of new cases that develop in an interval of time