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Chapter 2

Chapter 2. Understanding the Research Literature. Searching the literature. Bibliographic databases Proquest ERIC PsycINFO – produced by the APA and widely used for searching psychological literature. Searching the literature. Peer reviewed journals – common layout:

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Chapter 2

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  1. Chapter 2 Understanding the Research Literature

  2. Searching the literature • Bibliographic databases • Proquest • ERIC • PsycINFO – produced by the APA and widely used for searching psychological literature

  3. Searching the literature • Peer reviewed journals – common layout: • Abstract – short summary • Introduction • Methods • Results • Discussion • The literature also includes review articles, books, chapters, edited books, etc.

  4. Searching the literature • Scientific research is • Peer reviewed – process whereby the editor of a journal sends submitted manuscripts out to be reviewed by other researchers in the same field of study. • Reviewed blind – the reviewers are not aware of the author of the article they are reviewing and the author does not know who the reviewers are. • This process helps to maintain a high standard of quality in research.

  5. The research article • The Abstract – comprehensive summary of the article describing what was done, to whom, and what was found. • The Introduction – background on the research problem.

  6. Introduction • Like a funnel – Broad at the top narrow at the end • The overall goal is to connect the current literature to your proposed purpose and design • Introduce the problem/question • Develop the background information • Theory • Past Methodology • Statement of the rationale for the current study (final paragraph of intro) • Purpose • Hypothesis • The tone is technical and descriptive, not creative or inflammatory. Avoid quotes and footnotes

  7. The research article • Independent Variable(s) – the variable that is manipulated by the researcher. • Participant variables – inherent in the participants (e.g.. gender) • Dependent Variable – response measure that we think will be influenced by the IV. • Moderating Variables – influence the relationship between the IV and DV. • Mediating Variables – variables that intervene between the IV and DV in their cause-effect relationship.

  8. The research article • The Method Section – details about exactly how the variables were measured, manipulated, and controlled. • Participants/Subjects – humans/animals that participated in the research • Materials/Apparatus – details about equipment, tests, etc. • Procedure – chronological sequence of what happened to the participants.

  9. The research article • The Results – statistical information about whether or not the data support the research hypothesis. • In research statistics are used for two purposes: • To summarize data • To test research hypotheses

  10. The research article • Descriptive statistics – includes measures of central tendency, variability, and the strength of the relationship between variables. • Mean •Range • Median •Variance • Mode • Standard deviation • Pearson Product-Moment correlation - most common measure of association (symbolized as r). Describes how strongly variables are related to one another.

  11. Confidence intervals • Used when we are interested in estimating population parameters. • Report an interval within which we estimate the true population parameters to fall.

  12. The research article • Inferential statistics – used to generalize the findings of a study to a whole population. • Common Tests of Significance – used in hypothesis testing to determine whether results are statistically significant. • t-test – used to compare means of two groups. • F- test – used to compare means of more than two groups. (ANOVA, ANCOVA) • Chi-square – used to compare frequencies.

  13. Basic tests of significance • t-test – used to compare means of two groups. • F- test – used to compare means of more than two groups. • Chi-square – used to compare frequencies. • Effect size – provides some indication of the strength of the effect.

  14. Basic tests of significance • Regression – use a predictor variable to predict a criterion variable. • Multiple Regression – using more than one predictor variable to predict a criterion variable.

  15. The research article • The Discussion describes the outcome of the research in words • Briefly summarize what you found • Integrates the outcome of the study with previous research findings • Here is how you data fit in to the larger literature base • Draws conclusions • Based on theory or practical application • May present suggestions for future research • Limitations

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