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Published byMichael Dawson Modified over 9 years ago
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5 Questions What is Theory? Why do we have theory? What is the relationship between theory and research? What is the relationship between theory and reality? What is a good scientific theory?
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Theoretical Models Units (Variables) Laws of Interaction Boundaries System States Propositions Operationalizations Hypotheses
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Ideas to keep in mind 1) No a priori limits on what theory is about 2) A theoretical model has to be complete 3) Adequacy = internal logic 4) Validity is determined through research 5) Only testing makes a theory scientific
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Preferred Theory Is a matter of consensus - consensus about boundaries & scope - consensus about the internal logic - consensus about empirical evidence
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Standards of a Scientific Theory Explanation Prediction Parsimony Falsefiability Utility
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Description vs. Research Descriptions answers questions Research tests prediction
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Goals of Science Prediction - focus on outcome - of variable values - of system states - Precision Paradox: prediction does NOT require an understanding of the process Understanding -focus on process - interaction of variables - Power Paradox understanding does NOT lead to precise prediction
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Units may be real or nominal may refer to objects or their properties may be attributes or variables may be primitive or sophisticated must be temporally stable or recurring
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Types of Units Enumerative: property always > 0 Associative: property of any value (incl. 0) Relational: property derived from relationship of one property with another Statistical: distribution of a property Summative: representing complex entities *Note: typology not mutually exclusive
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Invention of Units Invention by Extension Invention by Subdivision Invention by theoretical necessity Invention by statistical necessity
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Laws of Interaction: link units of a theory do NOT necessitate causality may be categorical may be sequential may be deterministic
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Types of Interaction: linear curvilinear recursive
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Efficiencies of Laws presence-absence directionality covariance rate of change
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Conditions for Causality Covariance Temporal Precedence Exclusion of Alternatives
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Boundaries A theoretical model is said to be bounded when the limiting values on the units comprising the model are known Rubin, 1978
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Propositions A truth statement in regard to the theoretical model NOT in regard to reality (i.e., no need for empirical truth) Must follow accepted rules of logic A statement about the relationship among units NOT a statement about unit or set membership.
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Propositions & Laws equivalent to a law of interaction more limited then a law of interaction more specific than a law of interaction combining two or more laws of interaction
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Empirical Indicators Operationalization of a theoretical construct Reliability: consistency of measure Validity: measuring the right thing.
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Types of Validity in Social Science Face Validity Content Validity Criterion Validity Construct Validity
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Sources of Error: instrument properties measurement process external variables
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Hypothesis: A hypothesis is a prediction about the values of units of a theory, where empirical indicators are employed for the units in each proposition.
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Three condition of a good test of a scientific theory A) deducible B) improbable C) verifiable
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Hypotheses Testing and Theory Development Extensive Tests: test all strategic hypotheses Intensive Tests: test only key hypotheses Inductive Tests: build theory from empirical data
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Three Dimensions Underlying Marital Types Interdependence (High-low): –physical, temporal, psychological Ideology (conventional-unconventional): –beliefs, standards, values Conflict (avoidance-engagement): –how conflict is handled
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Marriage Types Traditional: high interdependence, conventional ideology, engage conflict Independent: high interdependence, unconventional ideology, engage conflict Separates: low interdependence, conventional ideology, avoid conflict
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Characteristics of Traditionals: conventional sex-types a high dyadic adjustment: agreement, cohesion, expressiveness a low conflict frequency a medium Self-Disclosure b high Couple Reference b
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Characteristics of Independents: liberal sex-types, women androgynous a medium dyadic adjustment: low agreement, high cohesion a high conflict frequency a high Self-Disclosure b high Linguistic Elaboration b
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Characteristics of Separates: conventional sex-types: husbands positive, wives negative a medium dyadic adjustment: high agreement, low cohesion a low conflict frequency, high verbal aggression a medium Self-Disclosure b low Linguistic Complexity b
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