Step 1. Ask a Question
Step 2 Background research
Step 3 Constructing the Hypothesis
Step 4 Test Hypothesis
Step 5 Is the experiment working?
Step 6 Did our results align with our hypothesis?
Step 7 Analyze & Draw Conclusion
Step 8 Communicate
These 8 steps are a part of this process.
What is the Scientific Method?
BOTH, Reliability and Validity refer to this.
What is measurement?
This occurs when a clinician or researcher does not follow the Code of Ethics standard.
What is "Scientific Misconduct"?
We are at the highest risk for compromising PHI which is protected by HIPPA.
What is "Personal Health Information"?
Ongiong belief in a concept or idea because it is what that person has always believed is called the method of this.
What is the Method of Tenacity?
Variables are introduced during this stage of the Scientific Experiment.
What is "Constructing the Hypothesis"?
But Reliability and Validity differ in how they do this.
What is measure?
One of the gatekeepers of Scientific Ethics.
What is the Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)?
Considering the risk of participating in the scientific process is called the Risk-benefit ratio or this.
What is the Cost-benefit ratio?
An authority or group dictates what individuals should believe or how to behave based exclusively on the authority's specific beliefs and viewpoints is called the Method of this.
Method of Authority
No difference pre-post or no relationship variable x, variable y.
What is a null (HO) hypothesis?
A Consistent measurement where the Results are Reproducible.
What is Reliability?
This legal document provides agreement to proceed in research.
What is Informed Consent?
We are at the highest risk for a breach of confidentiality, when we post an image or video segment that could compromise this information.
What is PHI? Personal Health Information?
Critically, the belief systems of the Method of Tenacity and Authority are held despite this occurring to counter the way of thinking.
What is "Providing Additional Information"?
One absolutely critical element needs to be firmly set/declared/stated BEFORE the study begins.
What is hypothesis statement?
How accurate is a measure.
What is validity?
This type of research study requires sabotage to promote communications skills must be approved by the IRB.
What is a "Deception Study"?
When explaining to a client and their family about engaging in a therapeutic approach that is firmly rooted in scientific theory. Be careful not to do this with the results.
What is "Do Not Overpromise Results"?
This belief system occurs when the person is only being open to knowing, hearing, learning, and extending knowledge, as long as it fits with their current line of thinking.
What is "Confirmation Bias"?
If the experimental results don’t match the predictions, scientists often engage in this process by refining their hypothesis or designing new experiments."
"What is iteration?"
Reliability and Validity are often called this concept, where two or more are combined into one.
What is conflated?
In communication disorders, we are the greatest risk for scientific misconduct and breaking the Code of Ethics with this particular type of activity.
What is a "Breach of Confidentiality"?
The Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) protects the interests of humans in the scientific process and this group as well.
What are animals?
When a person with right leaning political views, only watches right leaning political views is guilty of this perspective.
What is "Confirmation Bias"?