Research Methods and Data Analysis
Research Methods and Data Analysis
Availability
Cognitive shortcut that relies on what immediately comes to mind to make quick decisions
and judgments
• Biases due to retrievability of instances (familiarity)
• Biases due to effectiveness of a search set
• Biases of imaginability
• Illusory correlation
Obvious: every human reaction is convincible, important to know which reactions actually
occur most frequently and under what conditions
Role and position: army gave rise to rapid changes in position (change of roles) -> affected
outlook (change in responses to miliary affirmations depending on rank/role)
Cognitive Biases systematic errors in thinking that affect judgement and decision making
Confirmation bias
The tendency to seek out, interpret, and create information that confirms our beliefs, and
minimize discount or ignore information that disconfirms our beliefs
Self-fulfilling prophecy
A belief that leads to its own fulfilment
One’s expectations about ourselves/others lead us to behave in ways that confirm those
expectations
Beliefs (about ourselves) – Actions (towards others) – Others’ beliefs (about us) – Others’
actions (towards us)
Attribution theories how individuals perceive the information they receive, interpret events,
and how these form causal judgements
Actor-Observer Bias
• Tendency to attribute other’s behaviour to dispositional factors
• Tendency to attribute own behaviour to situational factors
Self-Serving Attributional Bias tendency to attribute our successes to internal traits and
talents & attribute our failures to external factors beyond our control
Self-Serving Blindness: 64% doctors thought pharmaceutical gifts affected other doctors but
only 16% thought these gifts influenced their own actions
Hindsight Bias tendency to assume one knew all along that a given outcome was likely
Post-hoc explanation
One becomes convinced they accurately predicted an event before it occurred. It causes
overconfidence in one's ability to predict other future events and may lead to unnecessary
risks
è Easier to avoid hindsight bias if one has explicit casual models of the world, if many
factors could be relevant (inter-relatedness), it’s easier to imagine multiple outcomes
False Consensus Effect tendency to overestimate how much others agree with our beliefs,
attitudes, values and behaviour
è Can lead to people overvaluing the correctness of their own opinions
False Uniqueness Effect tendency to think that our attributes and traits are more uncommon
and rare than they actually are
Availability Heuristic
When estimating commonality, we tend to defer to examples that come to mind most
easily/quickly
• Our opinions are more accessible/salient
• People we spend the most time with have very similar beliefs and attitudes
(family/friends)
Self-Esteem
Believing most others are like us, allows us to feel normal and maintain a positive self-image,
avoids feelings of deviancy
What is science?
• Open skepticism
• Question authority
• Intellectual honesty
Science helps build explanations that are consistent and predictive vs conflicting and posthoc
(hindsight)
• Replication and generalizability
• Creating and testing theories
Scientific Inquiry
Facts
Objective: can be confirmed by others
Observation: can be direct or indirect
Hypothesis
Logic: well-reasoned predictions about events
Falsification: can be confirmed/disconfirmed
Theory
Framework: organized ideas to explain facts
Predictions: expectations of specific outcomes
Is Psychology a Science?
Psychology is the objective and systematic study of how people behave and think
Scientifically investigating the psychology of individuals and groups require the use of
systematic, empirical methods to test hypothesis and theories
Types of Research
Validity
Type 1 error false positive (reject null hypothesis when it is true) no dif but you say there is
Type 2 error false negative (failure to reject the null when it is false) dif bf but you say there’s
not
à Effect appears, theorized effect can be obtained. Now replicate / Appears here, doesn’t
mean it will appear there (generalizability)
à Effect does not appear, does mean underlying phenomenon is not true
Descriptive Studies
Case studies: descriptive & exploratory analysis of a person, group or event that
Strengths
• Good way to generate hypothesis
• Provide data other methods can’t
• Provide illustrative anecdotes
Weaknesses
• Incomplete/ unrepresentative info
• Can only rely on self-report data
• Can be very subjective
• Cannot test theories/treatments
Survey research method used to collect information from a predetermined sample of people
è Gain insights into attitudes, beliefs, values and behaviors related to a particular topic
STRENGTHS WEAKNESSES
Good way to generate hypothesis Self-report data (misleading, subject to
biases)
Provide info about many people (high Can be very subjective (biased
willingness to complete) wording/order effects) (extreme)
Fast and cost-effective (can be done online) Cannot test theories/hypothesis (can’t
establish cause & effect)
STRENGTHS WEAKNESSES
Good way to generate hypothesis (insight Some phenomena may be difficult to study
for future studies) unobtrusively
High ecological validity, provide info about Can be very subjective (behaviour open to
people in natural environment interpretation)
Correlational measure two or more variables and their relationship to each other
• If x and y vary together, imply they are related
Experimental Studies
Type of design that allows the most control over the experimental situation
Manipulation of variable (IV) and measurement of response (DV)
STRENGTHS WEAKNESSES
Good way to generate hypothesis (insight Artificial nature of experiments (lack
for future studies) ecological validity)
Conclusions about cause & effect can be Ethical & practical issues (issue of
made deception)
Participant Expectancy Effects changes in behaviour that occur because the participant
believes that his/her behaviour should change
Solutions
1. Single Blind Study ppt doesn’t know which conditions they are in, hypothesis, what’s
being manipulated etc.
BUT researcher does and can manipulate who goes into which condition
2. Double Blind Study same but researcher didn’t influence who goes into groups and
how ppts respond, randomly assigned, researcher does not interfere
Meta Analysis a statistical technique for combining all published research results on one
question and drawing a conclusion
PERFORMANCE IN A SPORT
To what extent does education level and job experience affect income?
1. IV
Education Level
Condition 1: High (masters and/or PHD)
Condition 2: Low (undergrad)
Job Experience
Condition 1: high (specialized)
Condition 2: low (general)
2. Manipulation
Participants will be randomly assigned to one of the four conditions
- High Education Level/Specialized Job Training
- High Education Level/General Job Training,
- Low Education Level/Specialized Job Training,
- Low Education Level/General Job Training)
3. DV
Annual income measured by annual paycheck/ tax file
4. Measurement: Income will be measured in dollars. The scale will be continuous, and
the actual amount of income will be recorded.
5. Control Groups: