Research Methods in
Psychology

Non-Experimental Methods

Non-Experimental Methods

Types of
Interviews

Structured Interviews

Key Ideas

Very formal

Predetermined order and format of questions

Interviewer may only provide guidance to participant

Strengths and Weaknesses

Data is extremely easy to analyze
and compare with other interviews

Same format for every interview

Does not show particpant's personality

Very "artificial"

Limitation of questions: Interviewer can
only ask preset questions

Example

Conducting a study on television viewership
for high school students in East Hartford, CT

Used when yes/no data is needed and compared

Semi-Structured Interviews

Key Ideas

Questions can be both
open-ended or closed

"Conversation" between
interviewer and participant

Preferred in modern psychology!

Strengths and Weaknesses

Information about participant can be
obtained while keeping focus of study

Possible to collect information that was
not collected from all participants

May have difficulty analyzing data

Example

Conducting a study on depression affects
on teenagers, aged 13-19

Used when elaboration is needed from participants

Unstructured Interviews

Key Ideas

Only time and topic are predetermined

Very informal

Interviewer can change/ invent
questions throughout interview

Strengths and Weaknesses

Reveals participant's motivations
and interests

Interviewer can elaborate or further
inquire into topics/questions

Difficult to analyze data

May collect different information for each interview

Example

Study on why students choose to
go to IB schools in the United States

Used when specific information needed
is unspecified/unnecessary

Experimental Methods

Experimental Methods

Types of
Experiments

Field Experiments

Key Ideas

Take place in natural environment

Researchers can manipulate variables

Strengths and Weaknesses

Great ecological value

Findings occur in real
conditions/environments

Cannot control all variables

Errors/confusion of causation may occur

Example

Setup to see if people in a subway train would hep
an "intoxicated veteran" versus a "lame veteran"

Used in social experiments

Laboratory Experiments

Key Ideas

Takes place in a laboratory

Strict control variables

Strengths and Weaknesses

Experiments are easy to replicate

"Artificial environment"

Participants may react differently to natural environment
than they do in laboratory environment

Example

Mice made to run through maze multiple times
to test reactions to decision making under pressure

Scientists must be able manipulate variables so
certain theories can be tested (not always natural)

Natural Experiments

Key Ideas

Takes place in natural environment

Researchers only sit and observe

No manipulation/control of variables

Strengths and Weaknesses

No doubt that cause and effects seen
are ecologically accurate

Cannot always be sure cause-and-effect
variables observed are correct

Example

Research behavior of children who have been kept
in isolation by their parents

Done in medical research

Deductive Approach

Gather empirical data through experiments

Goal: test a theory/hypothesis

"A claim tested against empirical
evidence that can be accepted or rejected"

Independent and Dependent Variables

Inductive Approach

Gather qualitative data through
research questions

how people experience situations

"describe meanings attributed to events
by the participants themselves"

Analyze/theorize connections
in data after it is gathered

Ethical Guidelines

Participants must know true aims and purpose of experiment by the end

Must respect general psychological guidelines

No deception; consent needed; no physical/mental harm

Confidentiality and withdrawal rights of participants must be upheld

Ethical Guidelines

Must respect general psychological guidelines

No deception; consent needed; no physical/mental harm

Interviewers must always be professional

Protect identity of participant

Right to withdraw information at any time