Validity Flashcards
What is validity
Refers the extent to which an observed effect is genuine
What is internal validity
The extent to which a test measures what it is supposed to measure - are the effects due to the manipulation of the IV and not some other factor.
What is external validity
The extent to which results can be generalised outside of the research setting
What are the three forms of external validity
- population validity
- temporal validity
- ecological validity
What is population validity
A form of external validity- the extent to which findings from a study can be generalised to other people
What is temporal validity
A form of external validity- the extent to which findings from a study can be generalised to other particular time periods
What is ecological validity
A form of external validity- the extent to which findings from a study can be generalised to other settings
What is mundane realism
Refers to how realistic the task in the experiment is- if an experiment has low mundane realism then the task is not similar to real life and this leads to low external validity
What are two ways of assessing validity
- face validity- the extent to which test items look like what the test claims to measure
- concurrent validity- the extent to which a psychological measure relates to an existing similar measure. Give same group a similar, established measure and check to see if both sets of scores are positively correlated.