PS125 Research and Statistical Methods Flashcards
Stages of the scientific method in psychology
Stages of the scientific method in psychology = Question, Hypothesis, Prediction, Experiment, Analysis, Interpretation
What are the key concepts of the scientific method in psychology?
Key concepts of the scientific method in psychology:
Flasifiability
Null Hypothesis
“Testing to destruction”
Reliability
Validity
Testing reliability in psychological research
Testing reliability in psychological research:
Test-Retest
Inter-Rater
Internal Consistency
Parallel Forms
Types of validity in psychological research
Types of validity in psychological research:
Face
Construct
Concurrent
Predictive
What are the principles of scientific research?
Principles of scientific research:
Beyond observation and intuition
Generalisation
Testable, falsifiable hypotheses
Replicability
What are the main principles in ethical research as outlined by the BPS?
Ethical Research:
Informed Consent
Privacy
Confidentiality
Empathy
Competence
Responsibility
Integrity
Quantitative methods in psychological research
Quantitative methods in psychological research:
Numerical Data
Questionnaires + Scales
Experimental Method
Qualitative Methods in psychological research
Qualitative Methods in psychological research:
Lived Experience
Detailed Observation
In-depth Interviews
Ways of which scientific research is communicated
Ways of which scientific research is communicated:
Research Reports
Journal articles
Peer Review
Statistical Method definition
Statistical Methods = the collection, presentation, analysis and interpretation of data
Inferential statistics in psychological scientific research
Inferential statistics = makes generalisations about a population by studying a sample
-Can draw inferences about parameters from statistics
What are parameters?
Parameter = descriptive measure of a population
What are statistics?
Statistic = descriptive measure of a sample
A good hypothesis should…
A good hypothesis should:
-be stated in a declarative form
-place a relationship between variables
-reflect a theory in which they are based
-be brief
-be testable
What are the different research hypotheses?
Research Hypotheses:
-State a difference or inequality in relationships
-State a difference or inequality across groups
Differentiate non-directional and directional hypotheses
-Non-directional = no previous research, two-tailed tests
-Directional = previous research, one-tailed tests
Define a null hypothesis
Null hypothesis = states there are no relationship or difference between variables
-> Variables are equal or unrelated
-> Precise and well defined
-> Can be compared to to determine if its due to chance or not
Null hypothesis testing
Null hypothesis testing;
-> Either rejected or accepted
-> Accepting a null hypothesis can be done via confidence intervals or bayesian hypothesis tests
What is probably in scientific psychological research?
Probability = the degree of confidence we havein stating that a particular outcome may not have occured due to chance alone
Measured between 0 and 1
Calculating probability
Probability corresponds to relative frequency
Relative frequency = frequency / N
High probability = 0.5 (5/100)
Probability-continuous events
Probability-continuous events are unrepeatable and therefore cannot define probability
This contrasts probability-discrete events where probability can determined between 0-1
What is face validity?
Face validity = does the study look like it’s measuring what the researcher is intending to find?