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WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5 : Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect and applicable biases.
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WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

WHS AP Psychology

Unit 1: Science of Psychology

Essential Task 1-5:Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect and applicable biases.

Page 2: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

We are here

The Science of Psychology

Approaches to Psych

Growth of Psych

Research Methods Statistics

Descriptive Experiment

Case Study

Survey

Naturalistic Observation

Descriptive Inferential

Ethics

Sampling

Central Tendency Variance

Correlation

Careers

Page 3: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Essential Task 1-5:

• Describe descriptive research studies– Naturalistic Observation

• Observer Bias• Can not replicate or generalize

– Case Studies• Can not replicate or generalize

– Surveys• taking into account random sampling, • Wording-effect• Social Desirability Bias• Non-response Bias

Outline

Page 4: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.
Page 5: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

3 Types of Descriptive Research

1. Naturalistic Observation2. Survey3. Case Studies

Page 6: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Descriptive Research DESCRIBES

Page 7: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Naturalistic Observation

• What is it? A descriptive research method involving the systematic study of animal or human behavior in natural settings rather than the laboratory

• Huh? Researcher describes the behavior of the human or animal in their natural settings

Page 8: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Naturalistic Observation

• Strengths– The behavior is more natural than if they were in the lab

• Weaknesses– Can not replicate. Replication involves the process of

repeating a study using the same methods, different subjects, and different experimenters. If you can’t replicate you can’t retest the results or apply them to new situations to see just how generalizable it is.

– Can not generalize (apply them to new situations) your findings.

– Observer bias - occurs when the observers (or researcher team) know the goals of the study or the hypotheses and allow this knowledge to influence their observations during the study

Page 9: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Naturalistic Observations

Page 10: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Case Studies

• What is it? Study of a single individual or just a few individuals in order to describe their situation.

• Purpose? Take advantage of situation that you can not replicate (make happen again)

• How? Gather as much evidence as you can: Observation, scores on psychological tests, interviews, medical records etc.

Outline

Page 11: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Case Studies

• Strengths:– Takes advantage of nonreplicable situations– You get a lot of in-depth understanding

• Weaknesses:– Observer bias is a problem– Can not generalize (apply your findings to other

individuals or groups)– Can not replicate

Page 12: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Two most famous case studies in psychology

Phineas Gage

Genie

Page 13: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

The Lost Children of Rockdale County

Case Study of a syphilis epidemic at a high school in an affluent suburb of Atlanta

Page 14: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Survey

• What is it? Descriptive research technique in which questionnaires or interviews are administered to a selected group of people.

• Huh? To describe a large group of people you ask them carefully worded questions.

Page 15: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Survey

• Strengths– You can generate a lot of information for a fairly low

cost– Overcomes the false consensus effect– If you randomly sampled then you can generalize your

findings to the population from which you sampled.

Weymouth High School

Hingham High School

Page 16: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Survey

• Weaknesses– Wording Effect

• Wording can change the results of a survey.• Should cigarette ads be allowed on

television?• Should cigarette ads be forbid on television?

– Social Desirability Effect• If directly asked about a sensitive subject, we may alter

our answer to what we think is socially acceptable.

Page 17: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

“The root of the problem is that in real life, all scientists ever observe are samples. And, in real life, all they want to know about is populations” Nancy Darling, Ph.D.

Sampling from a population

Page 18: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Random Sampling

• Sampling in which each potential population member has an equal chance of being surveyed.

• Can’t just pull names from a hat• Alphabetical list and pick every 10th

name.

Outline

Page 19: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

Non-response Bias

• Women and Love study done by Shere Hite 1974

• 98% Dissatisfied by their Marriage• 75% Extramarital Affairs

• But to all of those who were mailed surveys only 4% responded.

Page 20: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

When randomly sampled• 93% of women are satisfied in their

marriages• Only 7% had affairs

Page 21: WHS AP Psychology Unit 1: Science of Psychology Essential Task 1-5: Describe descriptive research studies taking into account random sampling, wording-effect.

ComparisonResearch Method

Advantages Limitations

NaturalisticObservation

•More accurate than reports after the fact•Behavior is more natural

•Observer can alter behavior•Observer Bias•Not generalizable

Case Studies •Depth•Takes advantage of circumstances that can not be replicated

•Not generalizable•Time consuming and expensive•Observational Bias

Surveys • Immense amount of data•Quick and inexpensive•Generalizable•Replicable

• Poor sampling can skew results•Wording Effect•Social Desirability Bias