Research Methods
Research Methods: A Process of Inquiry, 8/E Anthony M. Graziano | Michael L. Raulin Copyright © 2013 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Chapter 8: Hypothesis Testing, Validity, and Threats to Validity
Graziano and Raulin
Research Methods (8th Edition)
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Testing Hypotheses
Researchers tests specific hypotheses
- Generated from the initial research idea through a series of steps
A research idea can stimulate dozens of research hypotheses depending on how
- it is translated into a statement of the problem
- the variables are operationally defined
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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The Initial Idea
The initial idea is the starting point
- Often vague or general
- It requires refining before research hypotheses can be generated
Refinement of the initial idea is based on
(1) a search of relevant research literature
(2) initial observations of the phenomenon
Narrow and formalize the initial idea into a statement of the problem
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Statement of the Problem
In the form of a question
- Clearly indicates an expected relationship
- Nature of the question dictates the required level of constraint of a study
- Causal questions will require experimental research
- Questions about relationships can be answered with lower-constraint research
Convert into research hypotheses by operationally defining the variables
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Generating Research Hypotheses
Ideas lead to
- observations
- library research
Statement of problem
Problem statements become research hypotheses when constructs are operationalized
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Operational Definitions
Initially covered in Chapter 3
The procedures used to measure and/or manipulate variables
Most variables can be operationally defined in many different ways
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Research Hypotheses
State clearly the expected relationship between the variables
The form is a declarative statement, but it is a tentative statement to be tested in research
Variables in research hypotheses are stated in operational definition terms
Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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The Role of Theory
Theory guides all research planning
- Often the primary source of the research hypothesis
- Guides the selection of variables
- Guides the operational definitions of variables
Most research is based on multiple, overlapping, and interacting theories
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Testing Research Hypotheses
Actually testing three sets of hypotheses
- The null hypothesis
- The confounding variable hypotheses
- The causal hypothesis
Accept causal hypothesis only if you
- reject null hypothesis (statistical analysis)
- rule out each potential confounding variable hypothesis (based on appropriate controls)
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Evaluating Hypotheses
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Types of Validity
Statistical Validity
Construct Validity
External Validity
Internal Validity
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Statistical Validity
Are the statistical tests accurate?
Threatened by
- Unreliable measures
- Violations of statistical assumptions
Strengthened by
- Using well validated measures
- Having approximately equal sample sizes in each group (covered in Appendix D)
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Construct Validity
Is our theory the best explanation for the results?
Threatened by
- Any alternative explanation for the results
Strengthened by
- Using well-validated constructs to build the theoretical predictions for the study
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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External Validity
Do the results apply to the broader population?
Threatened by
- Unrepresentative samples
- Generalizing beyond the limits of the sample
Strengthened by
- Gathering a representative sample (if possible)
- Clearly describing sample, so that other researchers will know the limits of generalization
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Internal Validity
Is the independent variable responsible for the observed changes in the dependent variable?
Threatened by
- Confounding variables
Strengthened by
- Adding adequate controls to reduce or eliminate confounding
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Avoiding Confounding
Confounding and internal validity
- Many sources for confounding (covered next)
- With proper controls, confounding can be virtually eliminated (see Chapter 9)
Confounding and construct validity
- Make sure that you have considered alternative theoretical explanations for the anticipated phenomenon
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Confounding Variables 1
Maturation
- Changes due to growth or predictable changes
History
- Changes due to an event that occurs during the study
Testing
- Changes due to the effects of previous testing
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Confounding Variables 2
Instrumentation
- Any change in the calibration of the measuring instrument over the course of the study
Regression to the Mean
- Tendency for participants selected because of extreme scores to be less extreme on a retest
Selection
- Any factor that creates groups that are not equal at the start of the study
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Confounding Variables 3
Attrition
- Loss of participants during a study; are the participants who drop out different from those who continue?
Diffusion of treatment
- Changes in participants’ behavior due to information they obtained about other conditions
Sequence Effects
- Effects on performance in one condition due to experience with previous conditions
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Subject Effects
Participants are not passive
- They try to understand the study to help them to know what they “should do” (termed subject effects)
- Respond to subtle cues about what is expected (termed demand characteristics)
Placebo effect: treatment effect due to expectations that the treatment will work
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Experimenter Effect
Based on the expectations of the researcher
Can affect the outcome of studies if not controlled
May be due to the experimenter providing demand characteristics to the participant
Not the same as scientific fraud (which is deliberate)
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Validity, Control, and Constraint
Three closely-tied concepts
Validity
- The accuracy of the study or procedure
- Increased by using appropriate control procedures
The more controls we employ, the higher the level of constraint
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Ethical Principles
Risk is balanced by reward
- A poorly designed study will provide no useful information; therefore, any risk would be unacceptable
Informed Consent
- Virtually guarantees that you will have confounding due to selection because some people will refuse to participate
- A small price to pay to maintain ethical standards
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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Summary
Start by building a research hypothesis
Testing the research hypothesis is actually testing three hypotheses
- (1) null; (2) confounding-variable; (3) causal
Several types of validity
Many potential confounding variables
Subject and experimenter effects can also affect the outcome of the study
Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
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Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. (2013)
Graziano & Raulin (1997)
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