Validity: General ?'s
Statistical Conclusion Vailidty
Internal Validity
External Validity
Name that Threat
100

This guides the design, implementation, and interpretation of a study.

What is VALIDITY?

100

Two threats to statistical conclusion validity

What are FISHING & LOW POWER?

100

This threat occurs when changes occur within the participants due to development or healing

What is MATURATION?

100

External validity reflects this

What is REAL WORLD PRACTICE?

100

Most participants are new to the job at the time of the pre-test. A month later, their productivity has improved as a result of time spent working in the position.

What is MATURATION?

200

Accuracy of the conclusions drawn from the statistical analysis of a study

What is STATISITCAL CONCLUSION VALIDITY?

200

This is the type of error made when a researcher searches data for interesting findings that go beyond the initial hypotheses

What is TYPE I ERROR?

200

This type of threat to internal validity occurs when the intervention leader encourages the control group to improve to equal the intervention group

What is the COMPENSATORY EQUALIZATION OF TREATMENT?

200
This enhances external validity

What is REPLICATION?

200

Participants showed higher productivity at the end of the study because the same test was administered. Due to familiarity, or awareness of the study’s purpose, many participants achieved high results.

What is TESTING/PRACTICE/ORDER EFFECTS?

300

When the conclusions drawn from the results are accurate and true

What is INTERNAL VALIDITY?

300

This is the type of error made when a difference or relationship exists but there is not enough statistical power to detect it

What is TYPE II ERROR?

300

When strategies are used to encourage attendance and participation this type of threat to internal validity is protected against

What is ATTRITION/MORALITY?

300

This threat to external validty can cause the sample not to represent the population

What is SAMPLING ERROR?

300

Because participants are placed into groups based on their initial scores, it’s hard to say whether the outcomes would be due to the treatment or statistical norms.

What is REGRESSION TO THE MEAN?

400

The extent to which the results of a study can be applied to other people and other situations

What is EXTERNAL VALIDITY?

400

This is what the value must be before we conclude there is a statistically significant difference or there is a statistically significant relationship

What is p is less than alpha?

400

If there is not random assignment and the groups that result are unequal on important characteristics, this results in this threat to internal validity

What is ASSIGNMENT/SELECTION?

400

A way to protect for this threat to external validity is to ensure that the researchers are sensitive to real-world practice

What is POOR ECOLOGICAL VALIDITY?

400

20% of participants provided unusable data. Almost all of them were from Group C. As a result, it’s hard to compare the two treatment groups to a control group.

What is ATTRITION?

500
Balance must be found between these two types of validity

What is EXTERNAL VS. INTERNAL VALIDITY

500

This is the threat that we protect against by using statistical methods to adjust for multiple analyses

What is FISHING?

500

This is when extreme scores change and move towards the mean with repeated testing

What is REGRESSION TO THE MEAN?

500

This is the name for a type of study that has conditions that are reflective of real-world practice

What ia EFFECTIVENESS STUDY?
500

Both groups in a study had improved pain tolerance with the kinesiotaping and the placebo taping conditions, but not the control condition. What threat does the placebo taping condition protect against?

What is the HAWTHORNE EFFECT?