SY- Psychology Key Terms Flashcards
Methodology
The type of scientific procedures- or methods- used to study/ investigate behaviour and cognitive processes. EG experiments, observations, surveys, correlations.
Generalisability
Can the research findings be generalised from the sample to the target population, was the sample representative enough to be generalised.
Operationalisation
Defining the variables to be measured precisely so that they can be tested/ measured.
Objectivity
Research that is unbiased, value free, impartial, usually from quantitative data, not open to different interpretations.
Subjectivity
Research that is open to interpretation, can be interpreted in more than one way, usually associated with qualitive data.
Reliability
Is the research generating consistent findings/ results?
Validity
Does the research accurately measure the behaviour/ cognitive processes/ attitudes etc. Is it investigating?
Credible
Is the research trustworthy; has the research been conducted and interpreted in a manner that meets the criteria of science, is it well-planned, controlled, accurate, generalisable etc?
Control
Eg over factors that might influence results, biases, subjectivity, culture, previous experiences.
Empiricism
Formulated by John Locke, the idea that scientific research should be based on what is directly observable and therefore testable, all knowledge should be based on measurable experience, you cannot measure what you cannot see/ observe/ experience.
Reductionism
To focus one small area in isolation rather than look at the whole area, reducing something to its constituent parts in order to establish casual relationships: cause and effect.
Holism
The opposite of reductionism- looking at behaviour as a whole, not just some of the parts.
Nomothetic
Establishing general principles that can be applied or generalised more broadly eg to the target population as a whole.
Idiographic
Studying individuals in terms of their uniqueness, eg the uniqueness of their personal experiences, thus not able to generalise.
Peer Review
A process whereby researchers submit their investigations to relevant scientific journals; publishers will then use peers who are experts in the relevant area to review the submitted research, recommend any changes and advise whether the research is suitable credible for publication. This ensures scientific rigour, credibility, high quality and standards. peer review could be checking methodological issues, originality, contribution, relation to previous research and looking for plagarism.