basic research terminology

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Page 1: Basic research terminology

Basic Research Terminology

BY:- firoz qureshiDept. psychiatric nursning

Page 2: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Concept: "A general idea referring to a behavior or

characteristic of an individual, group, or nation".

For example, pain, patient care, coping, happiness, cleanliness, dignity…etc.

Page 3: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???Construct: "A concept specified in such a way that it is observable in the real world, in order to facilitate testing of the idea".

For example, position, in real world has many different meanings in gynecology, in surgery and in management.

Page 4: Basic research terminology

Example of the relationship between "concept" and "construct":

Weight a concept.

Weight By electronic scale. In the morning. Before breakfast. Without clothes. a construct

Page 5: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Variable: "A concept that is observable, measurable, and

has a dimension that can vary".

For example, temperature is a variable that is observable, measurable, and varies from high to low.

Page 6: Basic research terminology

dependent variable

0 The "effect"; a response or behavior that is influenced by the independent variable; sometimes called the criterion variable.

Page 7: Basic research terminology

independent variable

0 The "cause" or the variable that is thought to influence the dependent variable; in experimental research it is the variable that is manipulated by the researcher.

Page 8: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Conceptual definition:

"The definition or description of the study variables that is drawn from the theoretical or conceptual framework".

Page 9: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Operational definition:

"The definition or description of a study variable that specifies how it will be observed and measured in the study."

Page 10: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Assumption: "A statement of principles whose

correctness has not been proven, but is taken for granted on the basis of logical reasoning".

"health is a priority for all people"

Page 11: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Hypothesis: "A statement of predicted or expected

relationships between the variables of the research (dep. & indep. variables)".

Hypothesis lead to empirical studies that are seeking to confirm or disconfirm these predictions.

Page 12: Basic research terminology

null hypothesis (Ho)

A statistical hypothesis that predicts there is no relationship between variables; the hypothesis that is subjected to statistical analysis.

research hypothesis (H1)

An alternative hypothesis to the statistical null hypothesis; predicts the researcher's actual expectations about the outcome of a study; also called scientific, substantive, and theoretical

Page 13: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Data: "Pieces of information that are collected

as they pertain to the study".

Page 14: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Limitations: "Weaknesses in a research“

Uncontrolled extraneous variables, that limit the generalizability of the findings.

Page 15: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Pilot study: "A small scale trial done in preparation

of a major research".

Page 16: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Validity: “Degree or extent to which the tool or

instrument measures what it is supposed to measure".

For example, a ruler measures the height not the weight, while the scale measures the weight not the height.

Page 17: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Reliability: “Degree or extent of consistency or

dependability with which a study tool measures the variable over time, by different persons".

Page 18: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Population: “Group of people who are going to be

studied, and to whom should the study result apply".

For example, bed-side nurses are the population in a research studying the factors affecting the nurse's workload.

Page 19: Basic research terminology

HOW TO DEFINE ???

Sample: "Are those persons – in the population- from

whom data will be actually collected, and from whom generalizations about the population will be made".

Page 20: Basic research terminology

accessible population

0 The group of people or objects that is available to the researcher for a particular study.

Page 21: Basic research terminology

research design

0 The overall plan for gathering data in a research study.

Page 22: Basic research terminology

Target population

0 The entire group of people or objects to which the researcher wishes to generalize the findings of a study.

Page 23: Basic research terminology

Abstract

0 (research abstracts). Brief summaries of research studies; generally contain the purpose, methods, and major findings of the study.

Page 24: Basic research terminology

Any Questions???

Page 25: Basic research terminology

Types of Variables

1. Dichotomous variables.2. Attribute variable .3. Active variables.4. Dependent and independent variables .5. Extraneous variable

Page 26: Basic research terminology

Types of Variables1. Dichotomous variables.Variables that vary in only two values.

For example: Male Vs female. Alive Vs dead. Day Vs night.

Page 27: Basic research terminology

Types of Variables 2. Attribute variable:

A pre-existing characteristic or attribute such as age,

sex …etc. which the researcher simply observes and measures.

Page 28: Basic research terminology

Types of Variables3. Active variables

Variables that do not pre-exist, so, the researcher has to create them.

For example: If the researcher is testing the effectiveness of 4 drugs on

blood pressure, here, all the four drugs are considered a variable that varies among individuals. Where different ones are taking different drugs: a, b, c or d.

Page 29: Basic research terminology

Types of Variables 4. Dependent and independent variables

Independent variable: “Variable that is believed to cause or influence the dependent variable".

Dependent variable: “Variable that is influenced by the independent variable".

Page 30: Basic research terminology

Example of Dependent/Independent Variables

Does Smoking Cause Lung cancer ?

Does Nursing care Cause Rapid recovery ?

Does Drug (a) Cause Improvement ?

Cause Effect

Independent variable Dependent variable

Page 31: Basic research terminology

Types of Variables5. Extraneous variable

Variable that confound the relationship between the dependent and independent variables, thus it needs to be controlled.

E.g., "air pollution" is an extraneous variable interferes with studying the relationship between smoking "independent variable" and lung cancer "dependent variable".