research methods

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RESEARCH METHODS How do we know when we know

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How do we know when we know. Research Methods. Outline. What is Research Measurement Method Types Statistical Reasoning Issues in Human Factors. What is Research. Purpose To learn something To base reasoning on evidence instead of merely our own assumptions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Research  Methods

RESEARCH METHODS

How do we know when we know

Page 2: Research  Methods

Outline

What is Research Measurement Method Types Statistical Reasoning Issues in Human Factors

Page 3: Research  Methods

What is Research

PurposeTo learn somethingTo base reasoning on evidence instead of

merely our own assumptions Scientific vs. Nonscientific Research

How one gathers evidenceEvidence in:

○ History○ Math○ Chemistry

Page 4: Research  Methods

Measurement: General Definition: to put a number on an

observation e.g.: thermometer, IQ Why?

Allows easier comparisonThe inherent ambiguity of language

Page 5: Research  Methods

Characteristics of Good Measurement Reliability

Consistency in measurementTake repeated measures, get same value

ValidityMeasure what think measure.

Page 6: Research  Methods

Validity Types

EcologicalMatch to situation

Internal:The study is well designedThe conclusions regarding theory can be

made External:

The results apply to the desired populationImportant in Human Factors Research

Page 7: Research  Methods

Example: Lighting Study

100 fC Illumination

10,000 fC Illumination

1000 fC Illumination

Page 8: Research  Methods

Method Types

Descriptive Correlational Experimental

Page 9: Research  Methods

Descriptive

Why Use?e.g. Anthropometric data

Archival Data Observational Methods

Interobserver Agreement

Page 10: Research  Methods

Correlational

Measure patterns of relationship Prediction Laws Correlation does not imply causation

Why?

Page 11: Research  Methods

Scatter Plots

-0.4 -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4

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Log Column Proportion

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Page 12: Research  Methods

Scatter Plot

40.00 50.00 60.00 70.00 80.00 90.00 100.00 110.00 120.00 130.00 140.0020.00

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GEQ

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Page 13: Research  Methods

Experimental

Manipulation Independent Variable Dependent Variable Causation

Requirements:○ Temporal Order○ Co-variation (Correlation)○ Rule out All Alternatives

Page 14: Research  Methods

Statistical Reasoning

Elements Variation in Data

ErrorPossible influence of IV

Question:Is variation in data due to error?Is variation in data due to error and IV?Sound familiar? Signal Detection Theory

Page 15: Research  Methods

Statistics and Signal Detection Theory Alpha = criterion Type I error: probability of concluding

there is an effect when there is not one = False AlarmUse Alpha to set this probability

Type II Error: Probability of not concluding there is an effect when there is one = Miss

Effect Size = d’

Page 16: Research  Methods

Statistical Hypotheses

These are what are tested by stats – not theories

H0: Null Hypothesis: only error is making data vary

Ha: Alternative Hypothesis: error and IV are making data vary

Stats give you p value or sig value = p(H0) is true

Page 17: Research  Methods

Proper uses of Stats

Are they necessary with large effect sizes (d’)?

What do you do if p > alpha? What do you do if p < alpha? What does it mean to Reject H0? Do you ever accept H0? If you reject H0 have you analyzed your

data?