RM - Validity Flashcards
Concurrent validity
A means of establishing validity by comparing an existing test or questionnaire with the one you are interested in.
Ecological validity
The ability to generalise a research effect beyond the particular setting in which it is demonstrated to other settings.
Face validity
The extent to which test items look like what the test claims to measure.
Mundane realism
Refers to how a study mirrors the real world. The research environment is realistic to the degree to which experiences encountered in the research environment will occur in the real world.
Temporal validity
Concerning the ability to generalise a research effect beyond the particular time period of the study.
Validity
Refers to whether an observed effect is a genuine one.
What are examples of internal validity?
- Investigator effects
- Demand characteristics
- Confounding variables
- Social desirability bias
- Poorly operationalised behavioural categories
Investigator effects
Anything that an investigator does that has an effect in a ppts performance other than what was intended. For example, encouraging ppts to try harder.
Demand characteristics
Cues that inadvertently communicate the aims of the study to ppts, such as the Bobo doll in bandura’s study ‘inviting’ an aggressive response.
Confounding variables
A variable in an experiment that varies systematically with the independent variable, and therefore conclusions cannot be drawn about what caused changes in the dependent variable.
Social desirability bias
In a questionnaire, the tendency for ppts to provide answers that do not reflect reality because people prefer to show themselves in a good light and don’t always answer questions honestly.
Poorly operationalised behavioural categories as an example of internal validity issues
Observers can’t record reality because the categories are not clear.
What is the difference between internal and external validity?
Internal validity concerns what goes on within a study and external validity concerns what goes on after the study.
What does external validity concern?
Generalising the findings of a study to other people (population validity), historical periods (historical or temporal validity) and settings (ecological validity).
What are the types of external validity?
Population, historical/temporal, ecological.