1 / 38

Concepts and Variables

Concepts and Variables. 8/30/2012. Readings. Chapter 1 The Measurement of Concepts (14-23) (Pollock ) Chapter 2 Measuring and Describing Variables (Pollock) (pp.28-31). Opportunities to discuss course content. Office Hours For the Week. When Friday 11-1 Tuesday And by appointment.

zorana
Download Presentation

Concepts and Variables

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Concepts and Variables 8/30/2012

  2. Readings • Chapter 1 The Measurement of Concepts (14-23) (Pollock) • Chapter 2 Measuring and Describing Variables (Pollock) (pp.28-31)

  3. Opportunities to discuss course content

  4. Office Hours For the Week • When • Friday 11-1 • Tuesday • And by appointment

  5. Course Learning Objectives • Students will learn the research methods commonly used in behavioral sciences and will be able to interpret and explain empirical data. • Students will learn the basics of research design and be able to critically analyze the advantages and disadvantages of different types of design. 

  6. The First Steps in Measurement Concepts

  7. What are Concepts? • Concepts are the words we use to describe political, social and environmental behaviors • They name and describe the external world

  8. The Conceptual Definition • This is the conceptual definition takes abstract things and make them real. • States the concept in unambiguous terms • Must communicate • The variation within a concept • The subject to which the concept applies

  9. Types of Concepts • Socio-economic • Attitudinal • Behavioral • Environmental

  10. The Operational Definition • Turning your concept into something that can be measured • Must be precise and accurate • This can be very difficult

  11. The Operational Concept of Organic

  12. The Concept of Poverty Absolute Depravation Relative Depravation • The Federal Government sets the poverty guidelines • This is then used to determine eligibility for benefits

  13. Definitions must match

  14. When Concepts and Operations do not match

  15. Measurement The Second Step: Variables

  16. What are Variables • These are simply measured concepts • This is called operationalization • Good variables take on all values of a concept

  17. Variable measurement • constants • Dichotomous Variables • The rest

  18. The Dependent Variable • The variable in a relationship you want to explain. The Y variable • There is only one of these in a relationship • It changes in response to an independent variable

  19. The Independent variable • Variables that that cause change in the dependent variable • The (X) variable • You may have more than 1 of these

  20. The Relationship Between them

  21. Telling the Difference between I.V.’s and the D.V.

  22. Additive Relationships • Most Social Science relationships involve many i.v.’s…. Why? • Explaining a Dependent variable with more than 1 independent variable is called an additive relationship!

  23. Additive Relationships

  24. Antecedent and Intervening Variables Antecedent Intervening Come in-between the IV and the DV Temporal events • Come before the independent variable • Things like Demographics

  25. How they can influence relationships

  26. A Spurious Relationship • What antecedent variable might be at play?

  27. How we measure our Variables Units of Analysis

  28. Units of analysis • The unit about which information is collected and that provides the basis of analysis • Each member of a population is an element • Why they are important?

  29. Individual Unit • The lowest form of data • People, congressmen, presidents, etc

  30. Aggregate Data • A collection of individual level units • Often measured in percentages • Footprints

  31. The Poor over Time

  32. Immigration over time

  33. The Problem of Access

  34. Fallacies made With Data

  35. Ecological Fallacy • this arises when an aggregate/ecological level phenomenon is used to make inferences at the individual level. • Taking statewide data and applying to individuals • Does everyone in MS go to church?

  36. The Exception Fallacy • taking one person's behavior, attributes, etc and applying it to an entire group • Using 1 example to define group behavior

  37. Examples from Texas Style

More Related