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Published byIsaac Holt Modified over 9 years ago
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Dr. Michael R. Hyman, NMSU Attitude Measurement (Click icon for audio)
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3 What is an Attitude?
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4 Attitude An enduring disposition to consistently respond in a given matter
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5 Attitudes as Hypothetical Constructs The term hypothetical construct is used to describe a variable that is not directly observable, but is measurable by an indirect means such as verbal expression or overt behavior - attitudes are considered to be such variables.
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6 Attitudes Behaviors
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7 Three Attitude Components
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8 Affective The feelings or emotions toward an object
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9 Cognitive Knowledge and beliefs
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10 Behavioral Predisposition to action Intentions Behavioral expectations
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12 Fishbein Model
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15 When Designing Attitude Measures, Theory is Important Example: Store Image
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16 Concept A generalized idea about a class of objects, attributes, occurrences, or processes
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17 Operational Definition Specifies what the researcher must do to measure the concept under investigation
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18 Non-attitudinal Example of Operational Definition
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19 Media Skepticism: Conceptual Definition The degree to which people are skeptical about the reality presented by mass media. Media skepticism varies across people, from –those who are mildly skeptical and accept most of what they see and hear in mass media, to –those who completely discount and disbelieve the facts, values, and portrayal of reality in mass media.
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20 Media Skepticism: Operational Definition Please tell me how true each statement is about the media. Is it very true, not very true, or not at all true? –The program was not very accurate in its portrayal of the problem. –Most of the story was staged for entertainment purposes. –The presentation was slanted and unfair.
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21 Constitutive vs. Measurement Definition
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22 Developing Sound Constructs 1.Specify constitutive definition 2.Specify measurement / operational definition 3.Perform item analysis 4.Perform reliability checks 5.Perform validity checks
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23 Attitude Measurement Process
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24 Attitude Measuring Process Ranking:Rank order preference Rating:Estimates magnitude of a characteristic Sorting:Arrange or classify concepts Choice:Selection of preferred alternative
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25 Ranking Tasks Ranking tasks require that respondents rank a small number of objects in overall performance based on some characteristic or stimulus.
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26 Rating Tasks Rating tasks ask respondents to estimate the magnitude of a characteristic, or quality, that an object possesses. Respondents’ position on a scale is where they would rate that object.
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27 Sorting Tasks Sorting tasks present several concepts —represented either on typed cards or a computer display—and require respondents to arrange the concepts into a number of piles or groupings.
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28 Choice Tasks Choice between two or more alternatives is a type of attitude measurement that assumes the chosen object is preferred over the other object(s).
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29 Recap Attitude defined –Three component model Importance of theory in designing attitude measures Conceptual versus operational definitions Attitude measurement process –Ranking, rating, sorting, and choice
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