chapter 1 - introduction & research methods what is development?
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 1 - Introduction & Research Methods
What is development?
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Specific changes over time
• Physical features• Perception• Cognition• Language• Emotion• Social abilities• Moral functioning• Other talents/abilities, creativity
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Integration of specific abilities into whole
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Change does not end with childhood
• Adolescence as end of developmentvs. lifespan perspective
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Why study child development?
• To gain insight into basic human nature, based on science
• To gain insight into adult behavior
• To gain knowledge about developmental abnormalities
• To learn ways to optimize the developmental conditions for all children
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III. Research methods
Different methods to answer different questions
A. Does one factor cause another?The Scientific Method
- obtain reliable information under controlled conditions
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• Example: Does day care lead to adjustment problems?
• Day care vs. home care => independent variable (IV)
• Adjustment problems => dependent variable (DV)
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Groups: Experimental vs. Control
• Experimental = receive treatment being tested
• Control = comparison
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• DV depends upon IV
• How will we know if differences in adjustment are caused by day/home care?
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• Treatment of children (IV)- that which you are manipulating, systematically altering to see its effects
• CONFOUND = any other difference between the groups
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• If no confounds, only thing different between the groups is the IV, then high internal validity
• Fairly sure that changes in the DV were due to IV
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How to increase internal validity?
- make groups same except for IV
- 2 ways
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1.How to assign groups?
***Random assignment of subjects to groups (experimental & control)
Random assignment makes the 2 groups equivalent at beginning of experiment
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2.During experiment:
No other differences between groups
(“holding everything constant”)
• These 2 factors decrease confounds, & increase internal validity
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Subjects/Who is in the experiment
• Population = all people of interest
• Sample = subset; those in the experiment
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• Sample of convenience
• Random sampling
- everyone in population has an equal chance of being chosen
- not part of scientific method
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• Why random sampling?
• Sample is representative of the population of interest
• Can apply (“generalize”) results to population
• Increases external validity
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• External validity = generalizability
• To other people, places, situations, etc.
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• Key to Scientific Method = internal validity
• Controls to ensure that IV -> DV
• Rule out confounds
• Random sampling is not critical
• Increases external validity
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Problems:
• Not always feasible or ethical
• Studies are analogues – simulations of real life (low external validity)
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Advantage of Scientific Method
• Cause and effect
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B. How strongly are two factors are related?
Correlational designs
Examples
• Longitudinal (change over time)
• Naturalist observation (in natural settings)
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• Not a true experiment
• No controls
• Is there a numerical relationship between 2+ factors?
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Evaluating the outcome
• A correlation coefficient
- indicates whether two variables are related
-1.0 to +1.0
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• Magnitude: absolute value of #= strength of relation
• Direction: sign
+ = as one increases, other increases
- = as one increases, other decreases
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Relationships:
• Positive
• Negative
• None
• Curvilinear
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Problem
• poor internal validity
-> don’t know WHY things happen
Reverse causality
Third-variable problem
Spurious relationships
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Advantages
• easier, practical
• ethical, real-life
-> can have better external validity
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C. What can we learn from one subject?
Three methods:
• Case study
• ABAB (Reversal) design
• Multiple-baseline design
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Case study method
- documenting behavior of one person
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Advantages:
• Real life (somewhat higher external validity)
• Suggests ideas
• Practical, easy (one person)
• Lots of information
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Disadvantages:
• No controls/comparison
(poor internal validity)
• One subject not randomly selected
(poor external validity)
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Two experimental methods for single subjects
- more control
• ABAB (Reversal)
• Multiple-Baseline
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ABAB (Reversal)
• Get baseline (A)
• Introduce treatment (B)
• Return to baseline (A)
• Reintroduce treatment (B)
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Advantages:
• More controlled than case study
• Still requires only 1 subject
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Disadvantages:
• One person = limited external validity
• Sometimes unethical to withdraw treatment
• If return to baseline, then no cure
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Multiple-baseline design
= change several behaviors sequentially
• Get baseline for all behaviors• Introduce treatment for first behavior• Then, treatment for second, etc.• Different treatments affect different behaviors
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Advantages:
• More controlled than case study
• Also requires only 1 subject
• No withdrawal of treatment
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Disadvantages:
• One person = limited external validity
• Sometimes hard to disentangle effects on individual behaviors
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How do people develop?
- Study change over time, aging
• Longitudinal• Cross-sectional• Sequential
Usually correlational
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Longitudinal
• one group measured multiple times
Advantage
• actually measures development
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Disadvantages
• Time
• Expense
• Attrition (not random)
• Limited causality
• Cohort effects
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Cross-sectional
• 2+ age groups measured once
Advantage
• easier, cheaper, faster
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Disadvantages
• Not true development, just age-group differences
• Cohort effects
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Sequential
• 2+ groups at 2+ times
Advantages
• True development
• Easier than longitudinal
• Rule out cohort effects
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Disadvantage
• More difficult than cross-sectional
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You think maternal drinking during pregnancy leads to childhood problems (such as lower intelligence and worse school performance). How would you design a study to answer this question? What problems and advantages does your design have?