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From Research Study Guide
From Study Guide
111
Medical
Graduate
10/24/2012

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Term
What is Reliability?
Definition
Consistency or accuracy of a measurement; extent to which a measure is free of random error
Term
What is Internal Consistency?  What is used to measure Internal Consistency?  What is normal value?
Definition
See if scales are composed of items that all measure the one attribute and nothing else.  Cronbach's Alpha or Coefficient Alpha is used.  Normal range is 0-1.00.  The higher the better
Term
What is Inter-rate?  What percent agreement is desirable?
Definition
See if 2 independent observers agree about the scoring.  Want at leasst 80%
Term
What is Test-Retest?
Definition
See subjects over time.  USed for traits that don't change over time (ex:  personality, abilities)
Term
What is Stability?
Definition
Extent which similar results are obtaied on 2 seperate occasions
Term
What is Validity?
Definition
Soundness of the study's evidence.  Whether there is evidence to support the inference
Term
What is Content Validity?
Definition
Does the measure adequately represent the domain of content?
Term
What is used to measure validity?  What kind of score do you want?
Definition
Validity Co-efficient (r).  Between 0-1.  Want at least a .70
Term
What is Chriterion Validity?
Definition
See if scores on intrument & external criterions match...
Term
What is Construct Validity?  What is this especially good for?
Definition
What is this instrument really measuring?  Especially good for highly abstract concepts.
Term
What is convergent validity?
Definition
Different methods of measuring the same attribute yield the same result
Term
What is Discriminant validity?
Definition
To differentiate the constrct being measured from other similar construct
Term
What is sensitivity?
Definition
Instrument's ability to ID a case correctly
Term
Specificity?
Definition
instrument's ability to ID noncases correclty
Term
What are the 3 types of Data Collection Instruments?
Definition
Self report, Observation, Biophysical Measurements
Term
What is self-reporting?  What is commonly used in self-reporting?  
Definition
Interview:  verbal exchange between the data collector and the subject. Questionaires are normally used.  
Term
What is Observation?
Definition
Systematic observing and recording behavior events, and settings of the variables under investigation.  
Term
Biophysical Measurement?
Definition
Has objectivity & preciison.  
Term
Data collecting methods vary in 4 dimensions, what are they?
Definition
Structure, quantifiability, researcher obstrusiveness, and objectivity
Term
What is the Critical Incidents Technique?
Definition
Involves probes about the circumstances surrounding an incident that is critical to an outcome of interest
Term
What is Think aloud method?
Definition
Involves having people talk about decisions as they are making them
Term
What does the Likert Scales do?
Definition
Present respondents with a series of items worded favorably or unfavorably toward a phenomenon; responses iindicating level of agreement or disagreement with each statement are scored and summed into a composite score
Term
What do Semantic Differential (SD) technique do?
Definition
Consists of a series of scales with bipolar adjectives (good/bad) along which respondents rate their reactions
Term
What is the Visual Analog Scale (VAS)?
Definition
Used to measure subjective experiences along a 100mm line designating a bipolar continuum
Term
What are Vignettes?
Definition
Brief descriptions of some event, person, or situation to which respondents are asked to react
Term
What are Q Sorts?  How are they assorted?
Definition
Respondents sort a set of statemtns on cards into piles according to specified criteria
Term
What are characteristics of Experimental Design?
Definition
Manipulation, control, and Randomization
Term
Basic Designs include what?
Definition
Posttest-Only & Pretest-Posttest Designs
Term
What is Posttest-Only Design?
Definition
Inovlve only collecting data once
Term
What is Pretest-Posttest Design?
Definition
Collect data both before and after intro of intervention
Term
What is Factorial Designs?
Definition
2 or more variable are manipulated simultaneously allow researchers to test both main effects and interactions
Term
What are Main Effects?
Definition
Effects from the experimentally manipulated variables
Term
What are Interaction Effects?
Definition
Effects resulting from combining the treatments
Term
What is Crossover Design?  What is a major problem with this?  It is good for what kind of subjects?
Definition
Exposing participants to more than one treatment.  Carryover effects is a problem.  If treatment effects are immediate and short lived.
Term
What is the Hawthorne Effect?
Definition
Knowledge of being in a study may change one's behavior
Term
What are Quasi-Experiments?  What is 2 major type?
Definition
Controlled trials without randomization.  Involves manipulation but NO COMPARISON group or RANDOMIZATION.  Main Type:  Non-equivalent Group Design & Time Series Design
Term
What is the Non-equivalent Group Design?
Definition
Before-after design: involves 2 or more groups of subjects observed before and after intervention.  Similar to before-after designs but no randomization.  
Term
What is Time-Series Design?
Definition
Collecting data over a period of time and introducing the treatment during that period
Term
What is Non-Experiemental Studies?  How many variables does it focus on?
Definition
Summarizes the status of a phenomena.  Observe, describe, and document aspects of a situation.  Focuses on ONE variable.  
Term
What is Prevalence Studies?
Definition
Examine prevalence of a condition or behavior at a particular point in time.  
Term
What is Incidence Studies?  What kind of study is necessary for this?
Definition
Used to measure the frequency of developing new cases. Longitudional design is required to determine how many new cases occurred over the period of study.
Term
What is Analytic Studies?  What kind of studies fall under Analytic Studies?
Definition
Comparison between groups to determine the role of various risk factors in causing the problem.  Include: Cross-sectional, correlational, cohort, case-control, Quasi-experimental, experimental
Term
What is Correlational Studies?
Definition
Examine the relationship among variable but involve NO MANIPULATION of the independent varialbe.  It is interrelationship or association between 2 variables where a tendency for variation in one variable can relate to teh variation of another.
Term
What is Retrospective Design?
Definition
Phenomenon is observed in the present is linked to a phenomena occuring in the past
Term
What is Cohort Studies? or Prospective Studies?
Definition
A Nonexperimental design in which a defined group of people is followed over time to study outcomes for subsets of cohorts
Term
What is Case Control Design?
Definition
NOn-experimental research design involving the comparison of "cases" and matched controls.  Usually retrospective: begin with disease and look backward in time for exposure)
Term
What is Cross-sectional Designs?
Definition
Involve the collection of data at one point in time (or multiple times in a short period of time)
Term
What is Longitudinal Designs?  What 3 kinds of studies does this include?
Definition
Collection of data at more than one point in time over an extended period.  Includes: Trend study, Panel Studies, and Follow-up Studies
Term
What does Trend Study do?
Definition
Collection of data from different people to examine trends
Term
What do Panel Studies do?
Definition
Collection of data from the same people to examine changes over time
Term
What does Follow Up Study Do?
Definition
Determine subsequent status of subjects
Term
What is Intervention Fidelity?
Definition
Whether the intervention was properly implemented and actually received
Term
What is Homogeneity?
Definition
Restricting the selection of subjects to elimnate variability on the confounding variables.  
Term
What are validity concerne with?
Definition
The extent to which appropriate inferences can be made
Term
What does Statistical Conclusion Validity concern with?
Definition
The strength of evidence that a relationship exists between 2 variables
Term
What does Internal Validity Concern?
Definition
Concerns inferences that the outcomes of interest were cuased by the independent variable, rather than by other factors extraneous to the research.  
Term
What is External Validity?
Definition
Concerns inferences about generalizability
Term
What is sampling?
Definition
The process of selecting a portion of the population, which is an entire aggregate of cases
Term
What is one of the main challenges of sampling?
Definition
Avoid bias
Term
What is Sampling Bias?
Definition
Systemic overrepresentation or underrepresentaiton of some segment of the population
Term
What is non-probability sampoing?
Definition
Where elements are selected by nonrandom methods
Term
What is convenience sampling?
Definition
Uses the most readily available or most convenient gorup of people for the sample.  Volunteer sample
Term
How strong is convenience sampling and how common is it used?
Definition
Weakest sampling that contains bias but most commonly used
Term
What is snowball sampling?  When is this used?
Definition
A type of conveninece sampling which refferals for potential particpants are made by those already in the sample.  Used when population is difficult to identify with
Term
What is Quota Sampling?
Definition
Divides the population into homogenous strata (subpopulations) to ensure representation of the subgroups in the sample; within each stratum, subjects are sampled by convenience.  
Term
What is Consecutive Sampling? 
Definition
Involves taking all of the people from an accessible population who meet the eligibilty criteria over a specific time interval, or for a specified sample size.  
Term
What is Purposive Sampling/Judgemental?
Definition
Participants are hand-picked to be included in the sample, based on the researcher's knowledge about the population.  Ex:  A sample of experts
Term
What is Probability Sampling?
Definition
Involve the random selection of elements from the population, yield more representative sample than nonprobability designs and permit estimates of teh magnitude of sampling error.  
Term
What is Simple Random Sampling?
Definition
Involves the random selection of elements from a sampling frame that enumerates all the elements
Term
If nursing students at UCONN were the accessible population, then what would be the samplying frame?
Definition
Roster of the students or telephone book
Term
In simple random sampling, what is the main problem?
Definition
No guarantee that the sample will be representative of the population.
Term
Is simple Random sampling used a lot?
Definition
No.  Rarely used and time consuming
Term
What is Stratified Random Sampling?  Give example
Definition
Divides the population into homogenous subgroups from which elements are selected at random.  Ex:  Having a population of different ethnicities and varying amounts of people in each ethnic group; pick a certain amount of people from each group to have a "good representation" from teh minority group
Term
What is Cluster Sampling (multistage sampling)?  Give example.  What is good for?
Definition
Involves the successive selection of random samples from larger to smaller units.  EX:  State-->Census Tract-->Households.  Good for when the population is large and widely dispersed
Term
What is Systematic Sampling?
Definition
The selection of every kth case from a list.
Term
IF you want a sample of 50 from a population of 5000, what will be the sampling interval for Systematic Sampling?  
Definition
Sampling Interval will be 100; every 100th case on the sampling frame would be sampled.  
Term
For qualitative sampling, what methods are usually used?
Definition
Convenience & snowball sampling, Purposive sampling, Maximum Variation Sampling, Extreme Case Sampling, Typical Case Sampling, Criterion Sampling, Theoretical Sampling
Term
What is Maximum Variation Sampling?
Definition
Deliberately selecting cases with a wide range of variation on dimensions of interest
Term
What is Extreme (deviant) case Sampling?
Definition
Provides opportunities for learning from the most unusual and extreme informatns (outstanding successes and notable failures)
Term
Typical Case Sampling?
Definition
Selection of participants who illustrate or highlight what is typical or average
Term
Criterion Sampling?
Definition
Involves studying cases who meet a predetermined criterion of importance
Term
What is Theoretical Sampling?
Definition
MEthod of sampling that is most often grounded in theory; involves decisions about what data to collect next and where to find those data to develop an emerging theory optimally.  "What group should the researcher turn to next?"
Term
What is used to estimate sample size in quantitative studies?
Definition
Power Analysis
Term
What kind of study do qualitative researchers most often use?
Definition
Purposive Sampling- to select data sources that maximize information richness.  
Term
What are sampling confirming and disconfirming cases?
Definition
Selecting cases that enrich and challenge the researcher's conceptualization
Term
What is a guiding principle in qualitative studies?
Definition
Data Saturation-sampling to the point at which no new information is obtained and redundancey is achieved
Term
Ethnogrpahers use who to serve as guides and interpreters of the culture?
Definition
Key Informants
Term
Grounded theory researchers typically use what kind of sampling?
Definition
Theoretical sampling.  
Term
What are the 2 criteria for qualitative sampling?
Definition
Informational adequacy and appropriateness
Term
What is Frequency Distribution?
Definition
Systematic arrangement of numeric values from the lowest to highest, together with a count of the number of times each value was obtained
Term
What is a symmetric Distribution?
Definition
When folded over, the two halves of a frequency polygon would be superimposed
Term
What is a Positive and Negative Skew?
Definition
Positive Skew:  Tail to the right.  Negative Sckew: Tail points to the left
Term
For interval-level or ratio level measurements, what is usually reported?
Definition
The Mean
Term
When the data is highlly skewed, what characterizes the center of distribution?
Definition
Median is preferred
Term
What is Inferential Statistics?
Definition
Use samples to make inferences about a population; based on incomplete info therefore there is always a risk of making an error
Term
What does it mean when a distribution is more heterogeneous?  Vs. Homogeneous?
Definition
More variables.  Ex:  Wide range of scores.  homogeneous means less range.  
Term
What percentage fall within 1 SD above and below the mean?
Definition
68%
Term
What percentage fall 2 SDs from the mean?
Definition
95%
Term
What percentage fall 3 SDs?
Definition
99.7%
Term
What is Contingency Table or Crosstab?                       
Definition
2 dimensional frequency distribution in which the frequencies of two variables are crosstabulated.  Ex;  Had data on pateint's sex and whether they were nonsmokers, light smokers, or heavy smokers.  
Term
What is Type I Error
Definition
Concluding that a relationship exists when it does not=Rejecting the null hypothesis that is true
Term
What is Type II Error?
Definition
Concluding that a relationship doe snot exist when it does= Accepting the null hypothesis when it is false
Term
What does the Alpha Level of Significance indicate?  What is the minimum Alpha Level for scientific research? What does this mean?
Definition
Indicates the probability of making a type I error.  Minimal acceptable level is .05.  Means out of 100 samples, a true null hypthothesis would be wrongly rejected 5 times.
Term
Lowering Type I error will do what to Type II Error?  How do you reduce risk of Type II error then?
Definition
Lowering Type I will increase chances of Type II errors.  Reduce risk of Type II by increasing the sample size
Term
What is BETA Level of Significance?  How is this estimated?  
Definition
The probability of committing a type II error.  Estimated through Power of Analysis.  
Term
For BETA Level of Significance, what does Power mean?  Power = ?
Definition
Power refers to the ability of a statistical test to detect true relationships.  power = (1-Beta)
Term
What is the criterion for an acceptable risk for Type II error?
Definition
.20
Term
What is Confidence Intervals?  What percentage is usually used?
Definition
Indicate the upper and lower confidence limits and the probability that the population value is between those limits.  Usually use either 95% or 99% Confidence Interval
Term
What does the P-Value tell you?  What does the numerical value mean?
Definition
Probability level that determines if something is caused by change fluctuations.  Probability of rejecting the Null Hypothesis of a study questions when that hypothesis is ture.  Any computed probability GREATER than .05 indicates a NONSIGNIFICANT RELATIONSHIP.
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