1 / 15

Research Methods in

Research Methods in. Developmental Psychology. Michael Hoerger. Observation. Hypothesis generation Laboratory Observation: Parent-child interactions, marriages, intrusive interviews, attachment style Naturalistic observation: bullying, ADHD

andrew
Télécharger la présentation

Research Methods in

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Research Methods in Developmental Psychology Michael Hoerger

  2. Observation • Hypothesis generation • Laboratory Observation: Parent-child interactions, marriages, intrusive interviews, attachment style • Naturalistic observation: bullying, ADHD • Used to gain detailed information on a single or small number of cases, commonly used in medicine and clinical psychology: rare events, new events, complex events Case Study

  3. Correlation

  4. Correlation • r = Strength of relationship between two variables (-1 to +1) • What is a “big” correlation? • Reliability: r = .90 • IQ tests: r = .50 to .90 • Personality research: r = .30 • Life/death: r = .01 • Problem: Correlation ≠ Causation due to 3rd variable problem and directionality problem • Solution: Methods and argument

  5. Cross Lagged Panel Design (or “Cross lag panel” or “Cross panel lag”) • Look at correlation between two variables over time • Does X correlated with changes inY? • Smoking at Time 1 causes increased mile time at Time 2

  6. Look at correlation between two variables over time • Does X correlated with changes inY? • Maternal depression at Time 1 causes increased behavior problems at Time 2

  7. THIS DRUG HAS HELPED TO TREAT: HAY FEVER, ASTHMA ATTACKS, ANXIETY, PAIN, ULCERS, ENURESIS, WARTS, ARTHRITIS, MALIGNANT TUMORS, DIABETES, NARCOTIC WITHDRAWAL, INSOMNIA, COLDS, AND INATTENTIVENESS

  8. Experiment “id!” • Independent variable: the manipulation; different conditions or groups • Alcohol vs. placebo; CBT vs. waitlist • Dependent variables: depends on the independent variable; the outcome variable • Age at death; depression; liver functioning • Problem: Participants must be similar across IV groups • Solution: Random assignment

  9. Survey • Interviews, questionnaires, tests • Used for correlational studies or as outcome (DV) measures in experimental studies • Highly efficient • Can be anonymous • Problems: Wording, Response bias (e.g. social desirability) • Solutions: Design with care

  10. Online Research • Most surveys and some experiments can be run on the web (e.g. priming studies) • Benefits: most efficient, useful for screening large samples • Risks: Lower experimental control, random responding, technical problems, non-representative sampling, ethics • http://funpsych.com example

  11. Physical Measures • Physiological: changes in functioning • Galvanic skin response (sweating), pupil dilation, heart rate • Physical: walking speed, eye movement, speed of responding, height, weight • Neurological: neurotransmitter levels, brain structure • Benefits: reliability of measurement • Risks: expensive, often fail to provide new information, low correspondence

  12. Cross-Sectional Research • Groups differ by age • Compare children to teens to young adults to older adults • Differences are presumed to be the result of age • Older people are slower due to aging • BUT differences may simply be due to contextual factors, such as the era each group was born in • OR older people are slower due to differences in nutrition growing up

  13. Longitudinal Research • Follow one group over time to what changes with age • Problem: expensive, bias due to dropout • Combines cross-sectional and longitudinal research Cross-Sequential Research

  14. Michael Hoerger To cite this lecture: • Hoerger, M. (2007, January 10). Research Methods in Developmental Psychology. Presented at a PSY 220 lecture at Central Michigan University.

More Related