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Instrumentation: Performance & Surveys

This research discusses the use of self-report measures, such as surveys and interviews, to measure performance in psychology. It covers different scales of measurement and provides tips for designing and sequencing survey questions.

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Instrumentation: Performance & Surveys

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  1. Instrumentation: Performance & Surveys 47.269: Research I Spring 2010 Dr. Leonard

  2. Measuring performance • Can measure optimal or typical performance • Optimal - achievement, aptitude, intelligence tests • Typical - everyday behavior, personality, attitudes • Could measure performance through observation, physiological measures, or self-report tests/measures • Self-report is most common in psychology • Surveys and interviews are two different forms of self-report measures • Used in research that is… • Descriptive • Experimental • Non-experimental/Correlational

  3. Scales of measurement • Based on what you are measuring (e.g., behavior, attitudes, emotion, etc.), you may use a different scale of measurement • Degree of specificity in your data • Either discrete or continuous variables • Discrete variables measured as units on scale with no value in between • Continuous variables can be any value along a scale to infinity • Scales of measurement: • Nominal • Categories • Ordinal • Categories that can be ranked • Interval • Scores with equidistant intervals between them • Ratio • Scores with equidistant intervals and absolute zero

  4. Scales of measurement • Nominal • Ordinal • Interval • Ratio

  5. Self-report designs: Pros • Relatively easy way to collect large amounts of data very quickly • Surveys are cheap and can be self-administered (e.g., online) • Written surveys can be given to a large number of people at the same time and can be anonymous, which may promote honest responses • Interviews are expensive but increase response rate and allow for better understanding of questions

  6. Self-report designs: Cons • Data are subject to bias, social desirability, demand characteristics, and response sets, which all affect the validity of findings • Bias - researcher’s or participant’s • Social desirability - responding in a way that would be seen as socially acceptable, especially when the topic is sensitive • Demand characteristics - fatigue, memory burden, confusion • Response sets - straight-line, extremes, right down middle • Interviews may taint data if participant is trying to impress interviewer or if the interviewer asks questions in a biased way • Option: telephone interviews

  7. Mistakes to avoid with survey questions Mitchell & Jolly (2007) • Leading questions • Questions that invite social desirability • Double-barreled questions • Long questions • Negations • Irrelevant questions • Poorly worded response options • Big words • Ambiguous words and phrases

  8. Planning a survey 1. Determine all questions you need answered, create a list 2. Choose the appropriate format for your questions 3. Edit questions for clarity 4. Sequence your questions effectively to avoid order or demand effects May help to counterbalance the order! 5. Pilot survey and refine questions 6. Choose appropriate sampling strategy

  9. Formatting survey questions • Decide which format will best fit the type of data you want (N, O, I, R) • Close-ended • Dichotomous, Yes/No • Reliable • May be less powerful • Multiple choice, categories • Caution not to treat them as interval • Likert scales • Offers choices of response along a spectrum • May be less reliable, ambiguity of points along scale • More powerful, more sophisticated analyses • Open-ended • May result in numeric or quantifiable data • May provide more rich, explanatory information • May not be answered as you intended, coding difficulties

  10. Scales of measurement • Nominal • discrete • Ordinal • discrete • Interval • discrete • Ratio • continuous

  11. Sequencing survey questions • Overall goal is to increase response rate and accuracy of responses • Put innocuous questions first and personal questions last • Put demographic questions last • Keep similar topic questions together • Keep questions with similar response options together • You may want to provide response scale only once to save space • You may want to use reverse scoring (change direction/meaning) to keep participants engaged and to test whether they are responding consistently

  12. Good example of reverse scoring: Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale 1= Strongly Disagree, 2, 3, 4= Neutral, 5, 6, 7 = Strongly Agree _____1. At times I think I am no good at all.* _____2. I feel that I have a number of good qualities. _____3. All in all, I am inclined to think that I am a failure.* _____4. I am able to do things as well as most people. _____5. I feel that I do not have much to be proud of.* _____6. I take a positive attitude towards myself. _____7. On the whole, I am satisfied with myself. _____8. I wish I could have more respect for myself.* _____9. I certainly feel useless at times.* _____10. I feel that I am a person of worth, at least on an equal basis with others. *Reverse scored (1, 3, 5, 8, and 9)

  13. Piloting and refining questions • Check for overall professional appearance of survey and ease of navigating questions • Avoid skips when possible • Don’t let question run across 2 pages • Build in breaks? • PROOFREAD-mistakes are distractions! • Pilot survey • Carefully consider who would provide honest feedback about the questions • Try to create a pilot sample that would represent your target sample • Practice coding responses because that may lead to further refining that makes analysis easier

  14. Minimizing social desirability • Patten recommends 1) observing instead or 2) using projective techniques -Ambiguous task or question participant can’t guess meaning of (e.g., ink blot) • Interpersonal techniques: • Professional conduct; increase respect for research • Create a sense of comfort and security • Reassure participants of confidentiality of responses • Never look at the measure in front of them • Keep multiple participants separated during measurement • Immediately separate any identifiers from data

  15. Minimizing social desirability • Measurement techniques: • Place most personal questions mid- to late- in questionnaire • Do not put measures you are relating adjacent to each other • Include some fillers or distracting questions • Include social desirability test items • “I never swear” • “I typically try to help those in need”

  16. Interviews • Unstructured • Interview bias is a problem • Data may be simple to analyze • Semi-structured (most common) • Follow-up questions allowed • Probably best for pilot studies on new topic • Structured (reading a survey) • Standardized • Reduce interviewer bias

  17. Pros: Higher return rate Make take questions more seriously after meeting researcher Participants can ask for clarification Researcher can read body language Cons: Researcher may bias participants’ response Greater chance for social desirability Participants may feel less anonymous; decrease honesty Delivery of measures: Person to person

  18. Pros: Participants may feel more anonymous; increase honesty Less chance for social desirability Efficient; less work for researcher Cons: Lower return rate (can just trash or delete) Participants may not take questions seriously Participants can not ask for clarification and may not understand directions Delivery of measure: Internet/Mailing

  19. Caveats for measurement • Don’t be so focused on the questions that you overlook how you will analyze the responses • Think: What analyses will I be able to carry out if I use these questions? • Make sure you the appropriate number and type of questions to truly test your hypotheses • E.g., if your hypotheses include correlation, you have to include at least two interval scale items • Consider including checks of your questions • Approach the same question in two ways or include a reverse coding of the question

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