Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAlexis Watson Modified over 6 years ago
1
Introductıon to ClInıcal Psychology: Scıence, Practıce and Ethıcs Research methods
Assist. Prof. Merve Topcu Department of Psychology, Çankaya University , Fall
2
Research in Clinical Psychology
Generating resarch hypothesis Ethics Determine research design options
3
Research in Clinical Psychology
Generating resarch hypothesis Previous literature Operational definition Conceptualizing relationship btw variables
4
Research in Clinical Psychology
Ethical issues Türk Psikologlar Derneği Etik Yönetmeliği Çankaya Üniversitesi bilimsel araştırma ve yayınlar etik kurulu yönergesi
5
Research in Clinical Psychology
Ethical issues Institutional approval Informed consent for research Informed consent for recording Client/patient, student, & subordinate research participants Dispensing w/ informed consent Offering inducements for research participants Deception in research Debriefing Humane care & use of animals in research Reporting research results Plagiarism Publication credit Duplicate publication of date Sharing research data for verification Oblication on reviewers
6
Research in Clinical Psychology
Determine research design options Internal validity the extent to which the interpretations drawn from the results of a study can be justified and alternative interpretations can be reasonably ruled out Threats to validity History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Statistical regression Selection bias Attrition External validity Generalizibility of the results
7
Research designs Case study Correlational studies Experimental desings
Degree of r/ship btw two variables No causal r/ship Correlation Mediation Moderation Prevention Intervention Experimental desings Meta-analysis
8
Participants selection & assignment
Sampling Optimize the fit between characteristics of the population to which the results will be generalized The type of sample that should be recruited The number of participants required for the study Statistical power
9
Measurement options Self-report measures Informant-report measures
Rater evaluations Performance measures Projective measures Observation of behavior Psychophisiological measures Archiaval data
10
Psychometric properties of the measures
Reliability Internal Consistency The degree to which elements of the measure (such as items on a test) are homogeneous. Test-Retest Reliability The stability over time of scores on a measure. Interrater Reliability The consistency of scores on a measure across different raters or observers
11
Psychometric properties of the measures
Validity Content Validity: The extent to which the measure fully and accurately represents all elements of the domain of the construct being assessed. Face Validity: The extent to which the measure overtly appears to be measuring the construct of interest. Criterion Validity: The association of a measure with some criterion of central relevance to the construct, such as differentiating between groups of research participants. Concurrent Validity: The association of a measure with other relevant data measured at the same point in time. Predictive Validity: The association of a measure with other relevant data measured at some future point in time. Convergent Validity: The association between a measure and either other measures of the same construct or conceptually related constructs. Discriminant Validity: The association between measures that, conceptually, should not be related. Incremental Validity: The extent to which a measure adds to the prediction of a criterion beyond what can be predicted with other measurement data.
12
Significance Statistical vs clinical significance
the outcome of a study and the degree to which a research hypothesis was supported evaluating the degree to which the intervention has had a meaningful impact on the functioning of the treated participants
13
Fin..
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.