Lecture 8 Flashcards
- Researcher is responsible for his/her participants
- Researcher is responsible for his/her own actions and those of any research aides
- Participants must provide informed consent
- Researcher protects participants from harm, danger, and discomfort
- Maintain anonymity and confidentiality
- Participants should not be coerced
- Researcher has responsibility after the investigation is complete to safeguard subject data
- Honest disclosure of results
What are these examples of?
Ethical obligations of research
• Textbooks and other secondary sources • Primary sources – Look at the most current literature first • Identify the key words – Alternate key words • Check appropriate indexes and databases • Computer retrieval systems – e.g. Sport DISCUS, Index Medicus, Medline, PubMed, CINAHL, Web of Science – Boolean logic (and vs. or) • Search the Internet – e.g. Google Scholar
What are these examples of?
sources for a literature review
(blank)
– Explain the purpose of the review and the how and why of its organization
(blank)
– Should be organized around important topics
– Relevant research must be organized, synthesized, and written in a clear, concise,
and interesting way
introduction
body
Using the Boolean operator (blank)/(blank) will narrow your search!
and
or
Use a (blank) management tool • Mendeley • Microsoft Word • Refworks • Endnote • Reference Manager
reference
When writing, two important considerations are (blank)
and completeness
– Various studies should not simply be presented relative to a topic, but rather the theoretical, methodological, and interpretive aspects of the research should be criticised across studies
– You should demonstrate to your readers that you have located, read, and understand the related literature
criticism
- “process of systematically examining research evidence to assess its validity, results, and relevance before using it to inform a decision”
- Essential step for putting research into practice
- Helps determine if conclusions should influence practical decision making
- Facilitates evidence-based practice
What is this the definition of?
critical appraisal
• Written last, not first • (blank) of the title: - Conveys focus of the study • (blank) with titles: - Too long or too short - Useless words
purpose
problems
- Motherhood/Intro
- General overview
- Review
- The “but” or “lead-in” statement
- Supporting documentation for “but” statement
- Statement of the problem
What are these the 6 steps of?
introduction
• The intent was to investigate the effects of exercise on
blood lipids among college-age females
• This study was designed to determine the relationship
between physical activity levels and fundamental motor
skills of preschool children
• The present study was designed to identify those
characteristics that differentiate students who binge
drink and those that do not
• The goal of the study was to determine is there is a
relationship between self-efficacy and self-reported
alcohol usage among middle-aged adult females
What kind of statements are these?
problem statements
• Based on theory or previous research
• State relationship between at least two variables
• Simple and clear statements (no vague terms)
• They are testable
– Variables can be measured
• They can be refuted
– “Yes it occurred” or “no it did not occur”
• Related to available techniques, procedures, statistical analyses
What are these characteristics of?
hypotheses
(blank) Hypothesis (H1)
- An “educated guess” or expected result
• Based on theory or previous research
• (blank) or Statistical Hypothesis (H0)
- A hypothesis of “no difference or no relationship”
• Primarily used for statistical testing
• Hypothesize that the independent variable has no effect on the dependent variable
Could hypothesize equivalence between two treatments
• Not usually presented
research
null
(blank) definitions describe an observable phenomenon
– E.g. physical activity
• Does it include exercise, occupational activity, housework,
sports, ADL?
– E.g. overweight
• Does it also include those that are obese?
• How is it being defined (BMI, waist circumference, fat
mass etc.)
– E.g. healthy eating
• How do you define it?
• Can mean different things to different people
operational
• Why is this study important? – Sell the story! • Focus on: – Contradictory findings – Gaps in the research – Contribution to practice – Generalizability (if applicable)
What is this the definition of?
significance
What is the difference between limitations and delimitations?
Delimitations • Characteristics imposed by the researcher – Define the scope of the study • Examples – Number and kinds of participants – Treatment conditions – Tests, measures, instruments used – Type of equipment – Location, environmental setting – Type of training (time and duration)
Limitations
• Very similar to delimitations, but tend to focus on potential
weaknesses of the study
– Try to eliminate before study starts
• Examples
– Sampling problems (subject representativeness)
– Uncontrolled factors and extraneous variables
– Faulty research design and techniques
– Reliability and validity of measuring instruments
– Compromises to internal/external validity