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RES 500 Academic Writing and Research Skills
Week 10 Observation Studies, Experiments, Surveys, Measurement and measurement scale
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Observations We call a set of data derived from an object (experimental unit) an observation. Each object is measured according to various aspects, such as temperature, concentration of some constituents, frequency of occurrence of some phenomenon, etc. Each of these aspects is denoted as a variable or feature. By assembling all available data on all objects we can build a matrix - a table where the columns represent the variables and the rows represent the measured observations.
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The Uses of Observation
Observation and the Research Process
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The Uses of Observation
Selecting Data Collection Method
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Non-Behavioral Observation
Record Analysis Physical Condition Analysis Physical Process Analysis
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Behavioral Observation
Nonverbal Analysis Linguistic Analysis Extra-linguistic Analysis Spatial Analysis
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Classification of Observation
We can classify observation in terms of the observer participant relationship. This relationship may be viewed from three perspectives: (1) Is the observation direct or indirect? (2) Is the observer’s presence known or unknown? (3) Is the observer a participant or nonparticipant?
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Limitation of Observation
Observation may be limited by: The difficulty of waiting for long periods to capture the relevant phenomena. The expense of observer costs and equipment. The reliability of inferences from surface indicators. The problems of quantification and disproportionately large records. The limitation on presenting activities and inferences about cognitive processes.
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Experiments Experiments are studies involving intervention by the researcher beyond that required for measurement. The usual intervention is to manipulate some variable in a setting and observe how it affects the subjects being studied (e.g., people or physical entities). The researcher manipulates the independent or explanatory variable and then observes whether the hypothesized dependent variable is affected by the intervention.
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Evaluation of Experiments
Advantages Disadvantages
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Conducting of Experiments
Select relevant variables. Specify the treatment levels. Control the experimental environment. Choose the experimental design. Select and assign the subjects. Pilot test, revise, and test. Analyze the data.
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Validity in Experiments
Internal Validity Among the many threats to internal validity, we consider the following seven: History Maturation Testing Instrumentation Selection Statistical regression Experimental mortality
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Validity in Experiments
External Validity Reactivity of testing on X . Interaction of selection and X . Other reactive factors.
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Experimental Research Designs
Preexperimental Designs True Experimental Designs Field Experiments: Quasi- or Semi-Experiments
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Surveys A survey is an investigation about the characteristics of a given population by means of collecting data from a sample of that population and estimating their characteristics through the systematic use of statistical methodology. The communication approach involves surveying or interviewing people and recording their responses for analysis
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Some attitudes are expected
. “There once was a demographic survey done to determine if money was connected to happiness, and Ireland was the only place where this did not turn out to be true.” Fiona Shaw Irish actress and theater director
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Communication Approach
d Strengths Versatility Efficiency Geographic coverage Weaknesses Error Inaccessible populations
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Communication Approaches
Self- Administered Survey Telephone Survey Survey via Personal Interview
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Self-Administered Surveys
Disk-by-Mail Intercept Modes Drop-off Mail CASI Fax 10-19
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Designing Questionnaires Using the TDM
Easy to read Offer clear directions Include personalization Notify in advance Encourage response
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Telephone Survey Traditional CATI systems Computer- administered
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Designing Questionnaires Using the TDM
Lower Cost vs. Personal Interview Wide geographic coverage Fewer Interviewers Reduced interviewer bias Fast completion time Random dialing CATI
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Measurement Select measurable phenomena Develop a set of mapping rules
Apply the mapping rule to each phenomenon
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Levels of Measurement Nominal Ordinal Classification interval Ratio
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Levels of Measurement Nominal Classification Ordinal Classification
Order interval Classification Distance Order Ratio Classification Distance Order Natural Origin
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References Business Research Methods by Donald R Cooper, 12th Edition.
Chapter 8 - Observation Studies, PP Chapter 9 - Experiments, PP Chapter 10 - Surveys Studies, PP Chapter 11 - Measurement, PP Chapter 12 - Measurement Scale, PP
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