Notes Quantitative Methods - Final
Notes Quantitative Methods - Final
Research proposal
- Pass or non pass exam – hard to not pass.
Oral exam
- Will be examined after one another in the group.
- Not super focus on the research design, more use it as an example.
- Example question: Sample – what is the thoughts behind the way you sampled in this
research? What are alternatives? What are the preconditions the we expect from a
sample? Respect to population, assume that it is a random sample. In some
population, unable to develop a sampling frame (?). Be careful looking into biases in
our sampling. Variation and cluster sampling, sample within a sample.
- Other example: Alternative choices, Given the scales – the items could be similar –
what should you think about that? Understanding of what is the predicted values in a
regression model vs the residuals, what do they signify, what do they mean? Various
kinds of validity tests – the reliability of your scales (Cronbach or p value below 0.05).
- Question a lot based on the last workshop (?).
- 20 minutes – including grade discussion. 5 min presentation, discussion 12 minutes, 3
minutes setting the grade.
- What would we have done better and WHY. Adding to what is already available
present new information.
The problem (of finding a good problem)
• The tricky “why” question
• Recap: the difference between qualitative and quantitative (variance) studies
• Example: Why are ‘actual’ risks underreported in risk reports
Why are they not reporting as they are “supposed to” report?
• The point is: the path to answering your “why” question is mediated by what you can
observe through your senses
• You gradually reach your answer through induction (bits and pieces begin to make sense)
• Second step: construct the theory through logical reasoning, defining terms, specifying
relationships etc. Specify/justify your answer based on available knowledge – deduction
• Third step: test/evaluate (a model of) the theory You test if data confirms the hypotheses in
your model - induction
Double sample size if there are a comparison between different dependent variable
(women/men)
* Your data should be considered through multiple regression analysis – consider when
creating research question (it should not be “exploratory”)
My idea:
Research question: Do communicators that work with social media get more easily burnout?
- Problem: social media can have a negative effect on your mental health. If you work
with it a lot it can affect your health. Plus the blurred boundary from personal life
when you are at home on social media, and work research.
H1: Working with sociala media on tour daytime job effects your health.
H2: Communicators that work with social media have a bigger issue seeing the boundary
between personal social and work social.
Theory: Think there is a lot of theory and literature around social media and health effects.
* To describe as a linear function, the variables must together form somewhat of a line
Dummy variable
Measure something in the absent of other (?) – will it have an affect on the dependent
variable
- Ex different between male and female
- Use t-test to see if it is significance
- Easy to put in regression analysis, but can only measure absent or not
Next workshop Regression models
Based on correlation analysis
Large residual – hard to make regression line
Important to look at it graphically
Significance
= A significant difference in the regression line we observe
- No slope at all No affect (no significance)
Coefficient
Y= 2x + 5 (2an är koefficiensen)
- Tells us the steepness of the curve how big the effect of the independent variables
has on the dependent variable
The higher the correlation coefficient – the more the model can explain
Also interested in the R-square – saying something about what the variance can explain
What we see in the regression line is if it would be statistically significant (not random or
pure luck)
Some other variable that we did not account for (?) Cannot use the model as a reliable
explanation
Introduction
- Topic
- Problem statement/research question
- Relevance
- Significance to knowledge/research
- Significance to society/practice
Literature review
- Previous research
- Highlight important findings and unanswered questions (gaps)
- Relate unanswered questions (and how they inter-connect) to research question(s)
Methodology
- What is your general approach/research design?
- Which data and how to get them?
- Specific technique(s) used to analyze data?
Expected results
- Explain how the outcome of your study relates to theory and RQ (restate/sum Up)
References
* Note: the outline of out project description is almost identical to a standard research paper,
you can change a little bit but should cover these aspects.
* Recommended from Henrik: Come up with a model that can be tested with a multiple
regression analysis
Three fragments
Establishing the phenomenon
- Difference between fact and phenomenon
Specified ignorance
- Building upon what is known as a precondition for identifying what needs to be
known for the specific scientific fields to progress
Strategic research materials
- Identifying places, materials etc. where you are likely to find empirical facts that
reflects the phenomenon under study
My ideas for Workshop:
- Lack of clear communication from teachers when studying (a Master in Strategic com)
- Problem of reducing screen time – main reasons
- Problem of grocery shopping sustainable when you are a student
- How February and January in Sweden affects study motivation
- Fake news – problem on news channels accurate communication
Bivariate analysis 1/7 (t-test?) - The bivariate analysis allows you to investigate the
relationship between two variables. It is useful to determine whether there is a correlation
between the variables and, if so, how strong the connection is.
Overview
- Studies the relationship between TWO variables.
- Can be a method for analysis in its own right!
- In this course, used as a step towards a multivariate analysis!
1. Qual-qual: cross tables
2. Qual-quant: compare means
3. Quant-quant: correlation
See T-test wishful measurement above
* Consider steepness of the curve – if not steep curve, some positive effect but not so much.
Calculates the effect from or independent variable to dependent variable.
Residual – the distance between the actual measuring points and where actual regression
line is.
Test for dimensionality – factor analysis – is it more than one dimension (??)
Reliability analysis allows you to study the properties of measurement scales and the items
that compose the scales. The Reliability Analysis procedure calculates a number of commonly
used measures of scale reliability and also provides information about the relationships
between individual items in the scale.
High Cronbachs alfa close to 1 = good
Google: “Multiple regression is the prediction of the dependent variable by the independent
variables, while factor analysis is the grouping of variables by their underlying dimensions.”
Indices/indexes 3/8
Sometimes we can ask several questions that has the same underlying overarching question.
For example personality. Or as in the case I found in internet: job-related stress where one
could ask the following questions:
• "When I think about myself and my job, I feel downhearted and blue."
• "When I’m at work, I often get tired for no reason."
• "When I’m at work, I often find myself restless and can’t keep still."
• "When at work, I am more irritable than usual."
Correlation analysis – is there a correlation and formula? – Will give a more robust
scale/variable in the end.
- Which items are suitable for collapsing into a new scale?
* New variables will have an increase points (5 options + 5 option + 5 options = 15)
* The steepness of the line will depend on the more options. Therefore you need to
normalize the variables (How?) – find a common measurement
Indices/indexes 4/8
Step 1: Do a reliability-test to see whether variables are suitable to combine into an index
Cronbachs alpha (above 0,7)
Step 3: Use the created index to run comparisons with another variable. For example will
men or women answer more yes or no on the questions above.
* Answers that are incoherent – maybe just answer to get a reward from participating –
remove that person.
For example: Instead of having one question asking the level of education we can have three
dummy variables
High education yes/no
Middle education yes/no
Low education yes/no
- Dummy variable= Want to add qualitative variable or nominal variable into regression
analysis
- Needed for qualitative values that could be expected to change the result.
- Will the present or absence of the color green affect the result?
- Needed when comparing mean values
- Codes to 1 and 0.
With factor analysis we can find out which variables that seem to co-variate and see
whether it could be an underlying factor steering these.
* Will hypothesis that what is behind the measurements there will be a land variable that
controlled the other variables.
* Large data – group variables together
Likert scale – How much do you like ice cream? 1-5, 1 hate, 5 love – clear neutral middle.
Concreate statement that you have to agree or disagree with.
Semantic scale – Similar to Likert scale, more open ended question, don’t need to use
“agree” or “disagree”, can be terrible and great
Attitude – Hard to measure. Ask many questions to get the “answer”. Answers correlating
(Future workshop if it is fit to put the answers “together” and create a common variable)
* Factor analysis – which type of correlation (?)
* Dependent variables (affects common variable), Independent variable (?)
* Research problem – always dependent variable
* Research questions answer – always independent variable
5 workshops
- Introduction lecture, then workshop, then finishing lecture about “operation”
Literature
- Pallant, Julie (2010). SPSS survival manual: A step by step guide to data analysis using
SPSS. New York: McGraw-Hill. [ISBN 9780335242405, 352 pages]
* Work with like a handbook
- Van de Ven, Andrew. H. (2007). Engaged scholarship: A guide for organizational and
social research. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [ISBN 9780199226306, 352 pages]
* More “reading”
- Field, Andy.(2016). An Adventure in Statistics. The reality enigma. London: Sage. [ISBN
9781446210444, 746 pages]
* More like a novel, “beyond this course” (not important for this course)
Research design
- Reading – discussing – project work
- Lecture/Workshops
- Feedback seminar
- Supervision
- Written group exam 1 ECTS (think only pass or fail)
- Oral individual exam 3.5 ECTS (A-F)
Part 2 – 15 Jan
Quantitative/continuous variables
- Interval: Scale where the difference between each step is equidistant but 0 does not
refer to an absolute point of zero. Example: Celsius degrees, dates, constructed
scales. Discrete or continuous.
- Ratio: Equidistant scale and absolute zero, such as age, income, etc. Discrete or
continuous.