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Crimes not known to police cannot be measured |
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A systematic attempt to test a causal hypothesis between the ind. variable and the dep. variable |
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Three Components of an Experiment |
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Definition
1. Ind. and Dep. Variables 2. Pre and Post Testing 3. Experimental and Control Groups |
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Experiment causes effects in and of itself (Placebo Effect) |
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Neither the researcher nor the participants know which group is which |
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The control group represents what the experiment group would look like if it was not exposed to ind. variable |
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Historical events that happen during the experiment confound the results |
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Testing and retesting influences people's behaviors. They put what they think we want, figure out true purpose of study |
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If different measures for pre and post testing are used |
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Statistical Regression Validity |
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Occurs when researchers are studying cases with extreme scores on some variable |
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Threat to validity- selecting volunteers as sample |
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Experimental Mortality/Attrition |
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Subjects drop out of an experiment before it is completed |
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Definition
Ambiguity about time order of ind. and dep. stimuli. Dep. actually causes changes |
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Diffusion or Imitation of Treatments |
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Definition
When participants from the different groups are able to communicate, may pass on info/aspects |
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When experiment group is receiving something good that control group is not, researchers may compensate for that |
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Subjects deprived of experimental stimulus compensate by working harder |
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Feelings of deprivation among control group that results in subjects giving up |
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Definition
When random selection is not possible |
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Nonequivalent Groups Design |
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Definition
Make control and experimental groups as comparable as possible. Match on race, age, gender, SES |
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Simple Interrupted Time Series |
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Definition
Observe before and after introducing an experimental treatment |
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Interrupted Time Series with Nonequivalent Comparison Group |
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Definition
Introduce treatment to two nonequivalent groups (Sobriety checkpoints in GA and TN) |
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Interrupted Time Series with Removed Treatment |
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Definition
Introduce and then remove a treatment |
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Interrupted Time Series with Switching Replications |
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Definition
Checkpoints begin in GA in May, and in June in TN |
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Term
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Definition
Many cases are examined to understand a small # of variables |
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Variable-Oriented Research |
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Large # of variables are studied from a small # of cases |
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Definition
Value for a given variable in a pop |
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Summary description of a given variable in a sample |
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Definition
List of elements/target pop. in our population |
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How sample statistics will be dispersed or clustered around a pop parameter |
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Range of values that includes a pop parameter (between 40% and 60%) |
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Estimated probability that a parameter is within a specified confidence interval |
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Definition
Select every 10th element for a sample |
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Definition
Select appropriate #s from homogeneous subsets |
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Term
Disproportionate Stratified Sampling |
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Definition
Samples not representative of a pop. on some variable. Large sample must be drawn to have adequate number of elements that exhibit unusual condition |
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Multistage Cluster Sampling |
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Definition
Used when sampling frames are not available but elements are already grouped into subpopulations |
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Definition
Probability that an element will be included in a sample is not known |
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Purposive or Judgmental Sampling |
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Definition
Select a sample based on our judgment and purpose of the study |
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Definition
Focuses on detailed and accurate description rather than explanation |
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Definition
Researcher lets people see them only as a participant, not as a researcher |
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Participates with the group but is known to be the researcher |
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Definition
Identifies as the researcher and interacts, but no pretense of being a participant |
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Observes and does not become part of it in any way |
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Definition
Based on a set of topics to be discussed in depth rather than using standardized questions |
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Term
Gaining Access to CJ Officials |
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Definition
1. Sponsor 2. Letter 3. Phone Call 4. Meeting |
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Definition
Systematic study of messages and meaning of those messages |
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Definition
Two people code the same message |
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Definition
Data collected by other researchers used to address new research questions |
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Definition
Certain questions only relevant to some of the respondents |
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Definition
Utilize when we want to ask several questions that have the same set of answers (Likert scale) |
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