The Scientific Method
The R-SMM
Research Variables
Causality
Reliability and Validity
100

The purpose of therapy

To facilitate a positive change in behavior that endures over time

100

Difference between Basic and Applied research 

Applied research is therapeutic and tests a therapeutic protocol, basic research is not yet therapeutic 

100

Define variable 

Any attribute, event, or behavior that has at least two levels 

100

What happens to the variables in Non-Experimental research vs. Experimental research?

Non-experimental - Simply observe or measure both variables without manipulating anything

Experimental - One variable is manipulated, the other is measured


100

Define Reliability and the three different types of Reliability

  • The consistency of a measurement instrument
    • Ensures that changes are due to the intervention
    • The “how” of measurement 
  • Test-Retest Reliability
  • Split Halves Reliability 
  • Inter-Rater Reliability
200

What are the three ways of knowing discussed in class?

Intuition, Authority, Empiricism 

200

Name the four steps of the model and what type of research is at each step

Musical Response Model --> basic 

Non-musical Parallel Model --> basic 

Mediating Model --> basic

Clinical Research Model --> applied

200

Four relationships that can occur between variables 

Positive linear, negative linear, curvilinear, no relationship

200

Limitations of Non-Experimental Method

Direction of Cause and Effect

- You don’t know which variable is causing the other to change, don't know which came first, don't know if a change was already in place, etc.

The Third Variable Problem 

- Another factor(s) or variable(s) causing changes in the variables of interest that is external to the two variables being measured

200

Formula for Inter-Rater Reliability 

Number of agreed upon behaviors /

Number of agreed upon behaviors + Number of disagreed behaviors = %

300

What is the purpose of the Scientific Method?

Provides a set of rules for gathering, evaluation, and reporting information

300

What is the important conclusion that can be drawn from Levels I and II of the model?

Tells us how the intervention/technique works (the overlap)

300

Independent vs. Dependent Variable

IV --> manipulated; the "cause"

DV --> measured; the "effect"

300

Two criteria of Experimental Control

  • Same testing procedures for both groups (same test, same time)
  • Random assignment (assigning participants to groups in a random fashion)
300

Define Validity of a measurement tool and the 5 different types of Validity 

- The trueness of a measurement instrument 

  • The “what” of measurement 

Construct validity, face validity, convergent validity, discriminant validity, criterion validity 


400

Two conditions of a scientific test

Conditions must support and disprove the research question

Conditions must be designed so others can observe, evaluate, and replicate the method

400

Given this Level 4 Research Question, compose appropriate questions for levels 1, 2, and 3:

 What is the effect of a musical mnemonic device on memory recall in children with learning disabilities?

Level I : How do people remember music?

Level II : How do people remember non-musical info?

Level III : What is the immediate effect of music on memory recall of nonmusical information?

400

Why do variables need an operational definition?

Accurate measurement 

Clear communication with other researchers 


400

What three factors determine causality?

Temporal order of variables, covariation, process of elimination

400

Define validity of a research study 

The trueness of an entire research study

500

How does research relate to therapy?

Research helps us better understand human behavior

500

Limitations of Experimental Methods, including RCT, and how to address them

  • Feasibility
    • Sometimes it is just not possible to do random assignment

    • Sometimes control group is unethical 

    • Solution - Select a different research design

  • Artificiality of Experiments

    • Bringing participants into an artificial environment 

    • Solution - field research 

    • You want to be able to capture genuine response 

  • Ethical Considerations

    • Solution - ex post facto 

    • Ask questions after to get an idea of what took place and what the results are 

    • May not be as accurate


500

Define Internal Validity and External Validity 

The results of a study are true; change in behavior is due to the intervention; strong cause and effect; causality 

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The results can generalize to other groups of individuals

Can be compromised by artificiality (research environment different from natural environment)

Important to the clinical implications of research 

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