Chapter 4 Studying Behavior - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 4 Studying Behavior

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Chapter 4 Studying Behavior Variables Can have levels Types 1. Situational Characteristic of the environment 2. Response Reaction time, performance on a task – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 4 Studying Behavior


1
Chapter 4Studying Behavior
  • Variables
  • Can have levels
  • Types
  • 1. Situational
  • Characteristic of the environment
  • 2. Response
  • Reaction time, performance on a task
  • 3. Participant or subject
  • Gender, personality trait
  • 4. Mediating
  • Personal responsibility

2
Operational definition
  • A definition of the variable in terms of the
    operations used to measure it the variable
  • Defines a construct by specifying how it the
    construct is measured or manipulated
  • Converts an abstract concept into concrete,
    situation specific terms
  • For example
  • In animal research ? Hunger deprivation for at
    least 12 hours
  • In human research ?
  • How hungry are you at this moment?
  • Not at all
  • Slightly
  • Moderately
  • very

3
Operational definition
  • Necessary for empirical study
  • Can be easily assigned or abstract
  • Helps to communicate ideas in the scientific
    community
  • However, researchers from different labs can
    define similar things differently

4
Variables
  • Usually thought to have a cause and effect
    connection
  • Independent variable
  • The cause
  • Manipulated in an experiment
  • Must have 2 or more levels
  • Can be quantitative (i.e. different doses of a
    drug) or qualitative (i.e. changing the sequence
    of words in a memory test).
  • It is usually on the horizontal axis (x axis) on
    a graph
  • Dependent variable
  • The effect
  • Measured in an experiment
  • Can have one or more levels
  • It is usually on the vertical axis (y axis) on a
    graph

5
  • For example
  • Homer notices that his shower is covered in a
    strange green slime. His friend Barney tells him
    that coconut juice will get rid of the green
    slime. Homer decides to check this this out by
    spraying half of the shower with coconut juice.
    He sprays the other half of the shower with
    water. After 3 days of "treatment" there is no
    change in the appearance of the green slime on
    either side of the shower.
  • What was the initial observation?
  • Identify the
  • Control Group
  • Independent Variable
  • Dependent Variable
  • What should Homer's conclusion be?

6
Relationships b/w variables
  • Comparing values along a numeric scale
  • Positive linear relationship
  • Increases in one variable (on x axis) are
    accompanied by increases in another variable (y
    axis)
  • For example
  • Are fast talkers more persuasive?
  • Plot words spoken per minute (x axis) against
    attitude change (y axis)
  • Negative linear relationship
  • Increases in one variable are accompanied by
    decreases in the other variable
  • For example
  • Does the number of people in a group predict how
    efficient the group will be?
  • One study found that as the size of the group
    increased, the amount of noise decreased.

7
Relationships b/w variables
  • Curvilinear relationship
  • Increases in one variable are accompanied by
    decreases and increases in the other variable
  • Referred to as U shaped curves or inverted U
    shaped curves
  • For example
  • In dose response studies, in the case of a U
    shaped curve,
  • low doses can cause high responses
  • Intermediate doses can have low effectiveness
  • High doses can cause high responses
  • No relationship
  • For example
  • Does the length of the tail of a bird predict how
    many matings it will engage in?

8
Nonexperimental vs. experimental methods
  • Nonexperimental
  • Making observations of the variables of interest
  • Asking others to describe their behavior
  • Examining public records
  • Allows for observation of covariation between
    variables
  • Correlational method

9
Nonexperimental vs. experimental methods
  • Problems with correlational method
  • Direction of cause and effect
  • The 3rd variable problem

10
Nonexperimental vs. experimental methods
  • Experimental
  • Involves direct manipulation and control of
    variables
  • The researcher manipulates the 1st variable and
    observes the response
  • Reduces ambiguity in the interpretation of
    results
  • The direction of cause and effect is clear
  • Attempts to eliminate the influence of all
    potential confounding variables
  • Control of extraneous variables

11
Nonexperimental vs. experimental methods
  • Experimental control
  • Control of extraneous variables
  • Variables held constant cannot be a confounding
    variable
  • Accomplished by treating participants/subjects in
    all groups in the experiment identically
  • Randomization
  • Ensures that the extraneous variable is equally
    likely to affect all participants/subjects
  • Eliminates influences of individual
    characteristics
  • Ensures that the composition of
    participants/subjects in each group is identical

12
Causality
  • Inferences about causality require 3 elements
  • -
  • -
  • -
  • Is the cause necessary and sufficient for the
    effect to occur?

13
Choosing methods
  • Field experiment
  • Done in the field, not the laboratory
  • The independent variable (i.v.) is manipulated in
    a natural setting
  • Advantage
  • -
  • Disadvantages
  • -
  • -
  • -

14
Evaluating Research
  • Validity
  • The accurate representation of information
  • Different types (each gives a different
    perspective on a research investigation)
  • Construct validity
  • The adequacy of the operational definition of
    variables
  • The measure has construct validity if it measures
    what it is supposed to
  • Face validity
  • Criterion oriented validity
  • Internal
  • The ability to draw conclusions about causal
    relationships from the data
  • Easier to prove when using the experimental method

15
Evaluating Research
  • Internal
  • Threats
  • Biased assignment of subjects
  • Experimental confounds (i.e. performing
    systematic differences)
  • Differential attrition
  • Pretest sensitization
  • External
  • The extent to which the results can be
    generalized to other populations and settings
  • Can these results be replicated? With different
    participants?
  • No method is superior to another
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