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Week 2: Finding and reading a paper
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◦ See StudyDirect for the names of your tutors ◦ Please remember our first names for submission of your course work ◦ Only email us for personal issues (e.g. to inform us of absence etc.)
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1 hour 50 min practical weeks 2 – 12 Please attend allocated sessions or negotiate a change directly with the Psychology office
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Week of termLecturePractical 1Introductory lecture- 2Questionnaire designThe research process 3Writing a lab-reportQuestionnaire design 4Frequency distributionsIntroduction to SPSS 5Means and SDsWriting a lab-report 6 Normal distribution & z-scores Graphs in Excel 7Test constructionMeans, SDs & z-scores 8Chi-square testsExploring a new dataset 9Linear regressionChi-square 10Correlation testsLinear regression & correlations 11Correlation interpretationExam revision 12nonparametric testsExam revision
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Autumn term coursework submissions ◦ Week 7: Lab report (based on fast-food data). ◦ Week 11: Lab report (based on the maths test you did last week).
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Course material - Graham Hole’s resources page: ◦ Google > Graham Hole Questions about the course/coursework: ◦ Forum: Study Direct > Research Skills > Forum ◦ Office Hour: (to be announced) ◦ Emails: Do not email tutors directly about coursework, use the forum.
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The Research Process Scientific Writing Style Original Article vs. Secondary source How to Find a Paper How to Read a Paper Research Treasure Hunt
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Subject area Read around the subject Research question Design the study Obtain ethical approval Conduct the study Data analysis Lab report
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Report of a study that you have conducted. Resembles structure of a journal article. Contains title, abstract, introduction, method, results, discussion, and references. Written in past tense (you are describing the results of a study).
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Write concisely Write in a formal tone Avoid jargon Focus on relevant literature Top tip: Read and look at published journal articles to get an idea of what you should be aiming for
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From a textbook citation... “ Stanley Milgram’s (1963) study of destructive obedience highlighted the dilemma facing a person ordered by an authority figure to perform an immoral act”
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But why would I want to look at the original? And if I did, how would I find it?
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One simple reason: When a textbook/paper author (or anyone else) summarises a study, they can get it wrong... The more people between you and the study, the more chance something is wrong Wilson I think Cuddy is very intelligent! House Cuddy Wilson thinks you’re intelligent...but ugly. House
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At the end of textbook chapters (or sometimes the whole book) and journal articles you will find the reference section Reference sections are ordered by first author’s surname: Milgram, S. (1963). Behavioral study of obedience. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 67(4), 371–378.
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If you know the reference for a paper:- ◦ Go to the library website: www.sussex.ac.uk/library ◦ Electronic Library > Online Journals > Type in journal name > Find the correct volume, issue and page numbers
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If you want to do a search on a topic:- ◦ Go to the library website: www.sussex.ac.uk/library ◦ Electronic Library > Online Resources > Choose ‘PsycARTICLES’ or ‘PsycINFO’ > Simple or Advanced ◦ Electronic Library > QuickSearch ◦ Google Scholar Top tip: be specific!
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Papers are laid out in this order: ◦ Abstract ◦ Introduction ◦ Methods ◦ Results ◦ Discussion ◦ References Easier to read them in this order: ◦ Abstract ◦ Discussion ◦ Introduction ◦ Methods ◦ Results ◦ (References)
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Abstract ◦ Summary of everything that’s in the paper ◦ Order: Past research, methods, results, conclusions ◦ Approx. 150 words Discussion ◦ Summary of purpose and results ◦ Comparison to previous research ◦ Possible faults ◦ Wider implications ◦ Future directions ◦ Conclusions
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Introduction ◦ Quick explanation of research area ◦ Summary of relevant past research (and perhaps its flaws) ◦ Purpose of study ◦ Brief description of methods ◦ Hypotheses Methods ◦ Usually split into four sections: Participants Materials Design Procedure ◦ Technical language
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Results ◦ Point-by-point breakdown of findings ◦ Descriptive statistics ◦ Inferential statistics ◦ The magic word: ‘significant’ References ◦ Don’t need to worry about these too much when reading ◦ If you find past research in the paper that sounds interesting, look for a full citation here ◦ And use your new skills to find that paper
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Work through the “Research Treasure Hunt” hand-out. Try not to use the same search tool for each question.
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Have completed this week’s work sheet (especially question 9). Next week: Questionnaire design
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