descriptive studies methods of study that try to describe a population

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Descriptiv e Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

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Page 1: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Descriptive StudiesMethods of study that try to

DESCRIBE a population

Page 2: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Case Study

Definition: an observation technique in which one person is studied in depth in the hope of revealing universal principles

Examples:Genie the Wild ChildPhineas Gage Anorexia Studies

Page 3: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Case StudyAdvantages and DisadvantagesWhat’s good about

case studies?

One person can tell us a lot about humans in general

What’s bad about case studies?

One case may be misleading!!!

“My uncle smoked two packs a day for sixty years and never had health problems!”

Page 4: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Survey

Definition: asks people to report their behavior or opinions

Examples:Political pollingU.S. CensusDane Co. Youth

Survey

Page 5: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

SurveyAdvantages and DisadvantagesWhat’s good

about surveys?

Cheap to administer

Gather a lot of information about a lot of people quickly

What’s bad about surveys?Wording Effects

“affirmative action” vs. “preferential treatment”; “welfare” vs. “aid to the needy”

Sampling ErrorPeople Lie

Page 6: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Naturalistic ObservationDefinition: observing and recording

behavior in NATURALLY occurring situations

We do NOT interfere in naturalistic observations…we simply watch and record!

Example: Jane Goodall observing chimpanzees

Page 7: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Naturalistic Observation Advantages and DisadvantagesWhat’s good about

naturalistic observation?

See authentic behavior

What’s bad about naturalistic observation?

Can’t interfere at all

Page 8: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Limitations of Descriptive Studies

These methods can contribute to overall understanding, but do not show causation.

Surveys and observation can show correlation

Correlation enables prediction.

Correlation does not equal causationCorrelation does not equal causation!Ice Cream Mystery

Page 9: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population
Page 10: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

CorrelationCorrelation can be:

causation (but not the other way around), influenced by 3rd variablespure chance

Page 11: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Correlation Coefficient

Scatterplots – illustrate correlation

Page 12: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Correlation?

Page 13: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population
Page 14: Descriptive Studies Methods of study that try to DESCRIBE a population

Illusory Correlation

Music that Makes You Dumb – Correlation?