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Title: Research Methods and Statistics Year 1 Notes
Description: Research Methods and Statistics revision notes for Year 1 Psychology students revising for Methods and Statistics exams. The notes cover descriptive statistics, inferential statistics and statistical tests, e.g. t-tests, chi square, Mann-Whitney U, etc., qualitative data collection methods, ethics and several more lecture topics.
Description: Research Methods and Statistics revision notes for Year 1 Psychology students revising for Methods and Statistics exams. The notes cover descriptive statistics, inferential statistics and statistical tests, e.g. t-tests, chi square, Mann-Whitney U, etc., qualitative data collection methods, ethics and several more lecture topics.
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PSYC134/PSYC135
RESEARCH METHODS AND
STATISTICS
Revision Summary Notes
DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS
Variables:
An Independent variable (IV) is manipulated, changed or controlled in a
scientific test
...
Data Levels:
When designing research and considering the variables, the measurement
of the variables is crucially important
...
g
...
● Ordinal (Ordered): Data can be placed in order but the intervals
between the data measurements are not equal e
...
shoe size (size 6
is not twice as big as size 3), army ranks (a colonel is not twice as
important as a captain)
...
g
...
g
...
Design:
● Between (also called unrelated or independent): Each participant
contributes a score in only one of the conditions e
...
you test male
reaction times and female reaction times
...
g
...
Descriptive statistics are used to describe data
...
Descriptive
statistics may help to identify extreme scores or non-normal distribution of
data
...
It is the only measure of central tendency that
applies to nominal (categorical) data as well as numerical
data
...
With an odd number of scores the
central number is the median (e
...
if you have 11 values 6 is the
exact middle, as it has five figures on either side
...
g
...
Unlike the mean, extreme scores do not affect it
...
The mean is by far the most useful measure of central
tendency and almost all inferential statistics are based on it
...
○ 5% trimmed mean: useful when data are unduly influenced by
outliers (extreme scores)
...
The
mean is then recalculated using the remaining 90% of data
...
It does not take into
account all the scores, only the extremes, thus a lot of
information is ignored, and it is heavily influenced by extreme
scores
...
Thus, the bigger the
variance the more spread there is in the scores
...
It is simply the square root of the variance and has
the advantage therefore that it is measured in the same units
as the original data, as opposed to the square of the
units
...
However, the
SD is also useful as approximately two-thirds of data points will
lie within 1 SD of the mean
...
We will return to this when we discuss data
distribution in more detail
...
e
...
05 - sample provides enough evidence that you can reject
the null hypothesis for the population - statistically significant
- Alpha level - the level at which we accept a result to be significant
- Read test statistic from SPSS, also report degrees of freedom
“A 2x2 chi square test was conducted to assess the association between
variable 1 and variable 2
...
52, p=
...
”
However, need to report effect size, as need to know how strong the
association is
Phi for 2x2 chi square and Cramer’s V for other chi square designs
Effect size
...
3 medium,
...
There was a statistically significant
association between variable 1 and variable 2, χ
2 (1, N=60)=8
...
004,
φ=
...
”
If alternative hypothesis is supported, null can be rejected
Problem with p values - type 1 and 2 errors
Type 1 - incorrectly rejects the null - saying there is a difference when there
isn’t one
Type 2 - incorrectly accepts the null - saying there isn’t a difference when
there is one
Overcome type 1 and 2 errors by changing alpha level
- Divide alpha level by the amount of tests going to conduct and
make that the significance level - known as the Bonferroni
correction
P-hacking
- Method of manipulating data to achieve significant results
Preregistration
- When researchers predefine what analysis they’re going to do before
conducting the study
ETHICS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Ethics:
1
...
Ethics in psychology - deception, harm, consent, etc
...
● 2 principles:
○ Right or wrong depends only on the results of the act
○ The more good consequences, the better/more right the act
...
What people do
is important, not the consequences
...
○ Moral rules
○ Immanuel Kant
■ While trekking in the Andes you come across a guerilla
leader who has captured 5 local villagers
...
If you refuse to shoot, he will kill all 5
...
Ethics in Psychology
● Ethical approval:
○ Confidentiality and anonymity
○ Deception
○ Protection from harm - both psychological and physical
○ Informed consent
○ Right to withdraw and non-participation
● Confidentiality and anonymity:
○ If this cannot be guaranteed the participants must be
informed
● Deception:
○ Not without strong scientific/medical justification
○ Or if likely to object or show unease once debriefed
○ Sufficient information at the earliest stage
...
○ Exceptions:
■ Observations in a public place
■ Information in the public domain, e
...
internet
● Deception:
○ Debrief as soon as possible
● Debriefing:
○ purpose/results
○ deception/discomfort
○ Procedural problems
● Withdrawal and non-participation:
○ Participants can ask to withdraw their data
○ Withdraw retrospectively
○ Data destroyed
○ Gowers et al, (2007)
■ Property of experiment?
■ Self selecting sample?
Internet research
● Informed consent:
○ children/vulnerable adults?
○ Participant identity?
○ Chat rooms?
● Public or private?
○ Pittenger (2003)
■ Widespread - anonymous - open/public forums
■ confidential/limited access forums
● Deception and debriefing:
○ Public: debriefing not required
● If deception is involved, participants must be debriefed -
electronic/telephone debrief?
Controversial Experiments
● Zimbardo - Stanford prison experiment
● Milgram (1963) - obedience to authority
● Rosenhan (1973) - to challenge validity of psychiatric diagnoses
● Watson (1920) - Little Albert - conditioning a phobia
Animal research
● 26 million animals each year in US
● Largely concerned with rats and mice
...
○ Excluded from US animal welfare acts
● Arguments for:
○ Finding new drugs and treatments
○ Improving human health
○ Ensures safety of drugs
○ Similarity to humans - can generalise
● Arguments against:
○ Cruel and inhumane
○ Drugs not necessarily safe
○ Expensive
○ Animals and humans are never exactly the same
● For or against?
○ Simon Chaitowitz - animal rights activist
■ ‘Throughout the past six years, I have felt terribly guilty
about the drugs and procedures I've undergone because
I know that so many animals have suffered in their
development’
...
g
...
36, p <
...
”
● Type of correlation
● Was it significant?
● Positive or negative figure?
● Variables
● Inferential stats in APA format
0
...
3 = medium, 0
...
05, so p values below
...
025, so e
...
p value
...
004
Pearson’s correlation
“A Pearson’s correlation analysis showed there was a significant positive
correlation between variable 1 and variable 2, r(48) =
...
001
...
1 r = small effect size, 0
...
5 r = large effect size
Visualising correlations - scatter plots
● Makes it easy to see strength of correlations
● Should show line of best fit, which represents pattern of data
● Correlational analysis essentially test how well this line fits the data
Visualising correlations - correlation matrix
● If you have lots of variables and you correlate them you could
present this info in a table known as a correlation matrix
● Should be in APA format
SUMMARY
★ Correlational analyses are used to assess relationships (associations)
between variables
★ Correlations can be positive or negative
★ Using these analyses a correlation coefficient is calculated telling us
the strength of the association and the direction
★ Correlation does not always imply causation
★ Spearman’s correlation is used when data is ordinal level or is
skewed
★ Pearson’s is used for interval or ratio data that is normally distributed
SURVEY METHODS
Designing a questionnaire
● Topic
● Type
● Draft
● re-examine/revise
● Pilot study
● Edit and procedures for use
Questionnaire items
● Don’t use
○ Double barrelled questions
○ Loaded questions
○ Negative wording
● Use of
○ Open-ended
■ Advantages: detailed answers, quick to design,
participant led
■ Disadvantage: long time to analyse, subjective
interpretation
○ Partially open-ended
■ MCQ plus others…
○ Closed-ended
■ true/false
■ MCQ
■ Likert scale
■ Disadvantages: guessing (50:50 guess), unsubtle,
complex to design, theory led
Questionnaire fallacy
● Mistaken belief that a questionnaire provides a true picture of what
people do and think
Questionnaire bias
● Order effects - question can affect responses
● Priming - thinking about the answer to one question whilst
answering the subsequent question
● Overcoming order effects/priming
○ Counter-balance question
○ 2 versions
■ One order then another - compare results - split-half
analysis
○ Randomise
● Demand characteristics - ppts believe they know what the
experiment is about - change behaviour, can be overcome by using
disguised questionnaires
● Social desirability - ppts try to make themselves look as good as
possible
● Acquiescence - balance of negative and position questions needed
● Cultural bias - language that could be misunderstood, various
interpretations of words, etc
...
unobtrusive - generally, data which exist before research
begins, e
...
physical traces, archival data
2
...
g
...
Focus groups
b
...
g
...
g
...
g
...
g
...
g
...
Preparing for qual data analysis
● Analysis process depends on the specific methodology you are using
● Generally, all involve coding and theme development
● Focus on depth, detail, context, complexity
Reflexivity
● About acknowledging how aspects of our identities, histories etc
...
(1996)
● Facilitated by researcher
● Getting people to think about, discuss/debate an issue (or set of
issues) related to the research question
● Key is group interaction
Why/when use them?
● To access attitudes, feeling, beliefs and experiences of a group rather
than just individuals (interviews)
● To generate discussion/debate about your research question/area of
research
● When people may not feel comfortable talking in individual
interviews
● Epistemology
○ Interpretivism (understanding) not positivism (explanation)
Type of research questions
Benefits of focus groups
● Allows for interaction and discussion
● Ideas can be shared
● Provides window into culture
● Allows for people to change their mind
● Many forms of communication; jokes, anecdotes, teasing, arguing
● Conflicting data
● Allows ppts to interpret each others’ responses
● Provides large amount of info in short space of time
● Can be empowering to ppts
● Facilitates discussion of taboo topics
Limitations of focus groups
● Research has less control over data produced
● Time-consuming
● Less confidentiality
● Determining conflicts in opinion
● Power dynamics
● Social desirability bias
● Maybe less detailed or in-depth than some interviews
● Particularly difficult to arrange
● Generalisability and reliability
Alternatively, can conduct a focus group study
● 6-10 per group
● Sample: heterogenous or homogenous?
● Incentives
● Advertising
● Semi-structured
● 1-2 hours
● Recording equipment
● Moderator
● Observer
Photovoice
= (definitions)
● Encouraging individuals to reflect about their community
1
...
Taking the photographs
3
...
Second focus group discussion
5
...
Disseminate the findings (photo-exhibition)
Why issues/phenomena have been explored through photovoice?
Photovoice methods: impact
● Last phase: dissemination of the findings and advocating for change
● Photographs and accompanying captions presented through an
exhibition used as tool to bring ppts’ voices to the attention of key
stakeholders, raise their awareness about the issues identified, so
that they can stimulate change
Benefits of using photovoice
● Encouraged engagement between ppts and stakeholders
● Invited ppts to successfully engage with the photographs, with the
collective discussions offering an opportunity to critically think as a
group about strengths and issues of their community
● Provide deeper level of knowledge - combination of different
methods allow us to gain greater comprehensiveness of
understanding of the topic from the ppts’ POV
● Creative tool to reach key stakeholders
Challenges of using photovoice methods
● Ethical aspects related to taking photographs
○ Important to ask written permission before taking photos of
individuals
○ People may feel protective of their communities
○ Issues of photo ownership
● Factors that can prevent ppts taking photographs that they want to
take
○ Photographing negative social concepts
● Time frame for taking photographs
Ethnography
= involves ppt observation with researcher participating/observing the
daily lives and events being studied over extended period of time
● Other characteristics
○ Using multiple methods of data collection
○ Placing emphasis on context
○ Focusing on what people do as well as what they say they do
● Approach is underlined by assumption that accessing beliefs and
behaviours in the context in which they occur will aid understanding
and provide a holistic perspective
When use ethnography?
● Useful when developing understanding of complex relationships
from multiple perspectives
Method
● Aims, not hyp - flexible design
● Reliant on
○ Gatekeepers
○ Snowballing
○ Networking
Multi-sited ethnography
● The ‘object’ being followed can consist of
○ The people
○ An artefact
○ A metaphor
○ A story
○ A biography
○ A conflict
● It is this conceptual link that differentiates MSE from comparative
studies
Types of data collection
● observation/field notes
● Photos
● Docs
● Informal interviews
● Formal interviews
Benefits of ethnography
● Possible to see interlinking between diff aspects of the culture under
study; looking at the wider processes, relationships, connections of
the actors in the setting rather than looking at one person’s POV in
isolation
● Researcher can establish rapport and trust with the ppts, which in
turn can facilitate honest, uninhibited discussion
Challenges
● Time-consuming
○ Observations
○ Field notes
○ Quantity of data
● More subjective than other qual methods
● Greater potential to invite ethical issues associated with invasion of
privacy and informed consent
● Depicts the people it studies as being in a void, uninfluenced by time
and broader social constructs
Types of qual analysis
● Thematic analysis
● Grounded theory
● IPA
● Framework analysis
● Narrative analysis
● Content analysis
● Discourse analysis
● Conversation analysis
T-TESTS
Stroop test (1935)
● Demonstrates cognitive interferences
● Reaction time delayed due to mismatching stimuli
● Quicker when there’s congruence than incongruence
T-tests
● Two types - used for within subjects and between subjects designs
● Within subjects - paired/related/dependent
● Between subjects - unpaired/unrelated/independent
● Used when we have two diff conditions or groups
● Parametric test
● Data must be interval or ratio and normally distributed
● Between-subject t-tests have an additional assumption:
homogeneity of variance
Effect sizes
● ‘Cohens D’
● D value 0
...
5 medium and 0
...
There
was a significant difference between congruent and incongruent
conditions, t (5)= 1
...
02, d
=
0
...
17±4
...
83±7
...
Direction of effect is stated - gained by looking at means of each condition
Stroop experiment 2
● There may be practice effects, so can do between-subjects design
● One group completes congruent task, another group completes
incongruent task
Independent samples t-test
● Homogeneity of variance - each of our conditions should have
similar variances
● Error bars = SDs, therefore if they’re similar, there is homogeneity of
variance
● If not, heterogeneity of variance
● Use stats test ‘Levene’s test’ to know if we have homogeneity of
variance - tests null hyp that the population variances are equal
● If Levene’s test is significant → no homogeneity of variance →
assumption is violated
● Leads to increased likelihood we will find significant effect when
there isn’t one (Type I error)
Welch Test
● Used when you do not have homogeneity of variances when ‘equal
variances are not assumed’
Independent samples t-test write-up
An independent samples t-test was conducted to assess the difference
in reaction time between congruent and incongruent conditions
...
88, p
=
...
92, with those within the congruent
condition having significantly lower reaction times (17
...
80) than
those within the incongruent condition (20
...
10)
...
But it is based on
ranking the data rather than just the sign of the difference
...
etc
...
of values
Effect sizes
● P values only tell us if effect is
significant
● Tells us nothing about the size of difference
● Wilcoxon - calc in Excel
● r=
...
30 medium, r=
...
64, p
<
...
47, with
improved performance when mnemonics were used (Mdn= 8, range=6)
than when they were not used (Mdn=5, range=6)
...
50, p
=
...
43, with cats (Mdn= 7, range=
18) performing better than the Trump administration (Mdn= 5,
range=6)
...
1 small, 0
...
8 large
Write-up: There was a significant effect of drink type on subjective
intoxication, X2(2)= 60
...
001, W=
1
...
Omnibus tests
● Friedman and Kruskall-Wallis are both Omnibus tests - tests which
look to see if there are differences between conditions overall (i
...
between more than 2 groups)
...
00, p
<
...
00
...
001) more intoxicated following alcohol (Mdn= 8,
range=6) relative to placebo (Mdn=3, range=4)
...
001) following
alcohol relative to the control drink (Mdn= 0, range= 3)
...
001) higher levels of intoxication
following placebo relative to the control drink
...
01 /31= 0
...
33
Eta squared
● tells us something very specific about our results
● Tells us how much variance (in the form of a percentage) in our
results is accounted for by out IV
● Suggested cut offs for eta squared:
...
06 medium,
...
16, p
=
...
33
...
002),moderate drinkers (p=
...
036)
...
48), light drinkers and non-drinkers
(p=
...
21)
...
SINGLE CASE RESEARCH
Overview
● Nomothetic vs idiographic
● Case studies
● Single-case experiments
○ Experimental designs
Nomothetic research
● Groups
● Universal laws
● Predict average behaviour
● Developmental trajectories
Idiographic research
● The individual
● Unique
● Rehabilitation
● Risk assessment
Conflict
● Mental health conditions
● Cannabis and treatment of pain
“If you want to know something about a person, why not first ask him?” -
Allport (1953)
The clinical’s goal “
...
”
Single case research
● Developing broad psychological theories
● E
...
Amnesia
● General understanding of hippocampus function
● Diff parts of the brain - diff kinds of memories
Amnesia
● Diff kinds of memory: STM, LTM, procedural, episodic, semantic
● Two main types of amnesia:
○ Anterograde
■ Impairment of memory after trauma
■ Only LTM affected
○ Retrograde
■ Impairment of memory prior to trauma
■ Episodic memory affected
HM - case study
● Anterograde amnesia
○ Intact STM
○ LTM impairment - no new memories
○ Memory prior to surgery normal
○ Retained old skills and acquired new skills - but is unaware he
has them
Clive Wearing
● musician/conductor
● Total amnesia - anterograde and retrograde
● Some memories from before illness
● Unable to form new memories
● Memory only lasts 7-30 seconds, music ability (procedural memory)
remains intact
Single case research
● Case studies: e
...
Freud
● Single case experiments: e
...
Skinner
● Case studies:
○ Intensive study of a unit/system
○ Richly detailed info from variety of sources
○ Exploratory
○ rare/unusual conditions
Freud - case studies - interpretation of dreams
Rat man
● Obsessive thoughts
○ Cutting his own throat
○ Father and fiancee tortured by rats
● Sexual experiences in infancy
Dora
● anxiety/hysteria
● Repressed desire
● Manifestation of jealousy toward the relationship between Frau K
and her father
Wolf man
● Severe depression
● Nightmare about white wolves
● Caused by seeing parents having sex
Advantages of case studies
● Good source of ideas for research
● Opportunity for innovation especially in clinical samples
● Rare phenomena
○ E
...
Luria (1968) - the mind of a mnemonist
Issues with case studies
● Objectivity - confirmation bias
● Cause and effect
○ covariation/correlation
○ Time-order relationship
○ Eliminate possible alternative causes
● Generalisation
○ Representativeness?
○ Is the phenomena the same in other people?
Single case experiments
● Skinner - School of experimental psychological research
● Behaviourist - operant conditioning
● Behaviourism evolved from single case experimental research
designs
● Training animals using operant reinforcement
Applied behaviour analysis
● ABAB design (reversal):
○ Baseline - intervention - baseline - intervention
○ Clear change when intervention is added or removed =
effective treatment
○ No ethical or practical issues
○ Continuous assessment
○ Baseline assessment - standard for improvement
○ Stability of performance/behaviour - evaluation of change from
baseline
○ Different phases
■ High internal validity
■ Testing diff interventions
○ Data evaluation
■ Mean - compare mean values across consecutive
observation points which constitute a ‘phase’
■ Level analysis - diff between last observation in one
phase and first observation in the next
■ Trend analysis - rate at which changes appear within the
diff phases
■ Latency - how quickly changes between diff phases
become apparent
● Some interventions can’t be reversed: e
...
practical or ethical reasons
Title: Research Methods and Statistics Year 1 Notes
Description: Research Methods and Statistics revision notes for Year 1 Psychology students revising for Methods and Statistics exams. The notes cover descriptive statistics, inferential statistics and statistical tests, e.g. t-tests, chi square, Mann-Whitney U, etc., qualitative data collection methods, ethics and several more lecture topics.
Description: Research Methods and Statistics revision notes for Year 1 Psychology students revising for Methods and Statistics exams. The notes cover descriptive statistics, inferential statistics and statistical tests, e.g. t-tests, chi square, Mann-Whitney U, etc., qualitative data collection methods, ethics and several more lecture topics.