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EXPERIMENTAL
RESEARCH DESIGN
COURSE I - RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Saba Jahan
Research Scholar
KSOU, Mysuru
CHARACTERISTICS OF EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
• Experimentation is the classic method of the science laboratory where
elements manipulated and effects observed can be controlled.
• It is the most sophisticated, exacting, and powerful method for discovering
and developing an organized body of knowledge.
• Experimental research provides a systematic and logical method for
answering the research question
• The immediate purpose of experimentation is to predict events in the
experimental setting.
• The ultimate purpose is to generalize the variable relationships so that they
may be applied outside the laboratory to a wider population of interest.
• Experimentation provides a method of hypothesis testing.
PROCESS OF EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
• After experimenters define a problem, they propose a tentative answer or
hypothesis.
• They test the hypothesis and confirm or refute it in the light of the controlled
variable relationship that they have observed. It is important to note that the
confirmation or rejection of the hypothesis is stated in terms of probability rather
than certainty.
• Experimenters manipulate certain stimuli, treatments, or environmental conditions
and observe how the condition or behavior of the subject is affected or changed.
• Their manipulation is deliberate and systematic.
• They must be aware of other factors that could influence the outcome and remove
or control them so that they can establish a logical association between
manipulated factors and observed effects.
EXPERIMENTAL AND CONTROL GROUP
• An experiment involves the comparison of the effects of a particular treatment
with that of a different treatment or of no treatment.
• In a simple conventional experiment, reference is usually made to an experimental
group and to a control group.
• These groups are equated as nearly as possible.The experimental group is exposed
to the influence of the factor under consideration; the control group is not.
• Observations are then made to determine what difference appears or what change
or modification occurs in the experimental as contrasted with the control group.
• In medical experiments a harmless or inert substitute is administered to the control
group to offset the psychological effect of medication.
• A similar term Hawthorne Effect was introduced into the psychological literature.
VARIABLES
• Independent and DependentVariables
• Variables are the conditions or characteristics that the experimenter manipulates,
controls, or observes.
• The independent variables are the conditions or characteristics that the
experimenter manipulates or controls in his or her attempt to ascertain their
relationship to observed phenomena.
• The dependent variables are the conditions or characteristics that appear,
disappear, or change as the experimenter introduces, removes, or changes
independent variables.
• There are two types of independent variables: treatment and organismic or attribute
variables.
• Treatment variables are those factors that the experimenter manipulates and to
which he or she assigns subjects.
• Attribute variables are those characteristics that cannot be altered by the
experimenter such as age, sex, race, and intelligence level that have already been
determined, but the experimenter can decide to include them or remove them as
variables to be studied.
• ConfoundingVariables - Confounding variables are those aspects of a study or
sample that might influence the dependent variable (outcome measure) and
whose effect may be confused with the effects of the independent variable.
• Confounding variables are of two types: intervening and extraneous variables.
• InterveningVariables - In many types of behavioral research the relationship
between the independent and dependent variables is not a simple one of stimulus
to response. Certain variables that cannot be controlled or measured directly may
have an important effect on the outcome.These modifying variables intervene
between the cause and the effect.
• anxiety, fatigue, motivation are examples of intervening variables.
• They are difficult to define in operational, observable, terms, but they cannot be
ignored. Rather, they must be controlled as much as is feasible through the use of
appropriate designs.
• ExtraneousVariables
• Extraneous variables are those uncontrolled variables (i.e., variables not
manipulated by the experimenter) that may have a significant influence on
the results of a study.
• Many research conclusions are questionable because of the influence of
these extraneous variables.
• Although it is impossible to eliminate all extraneous variables, sound
experimental design enables the researcher to largely neutralize their
influence.
CONTROLLING CONFOUNDINGVARIABLES
• Removing theVariable
• Randomization
• Matching Cases
• BalancingCases or Group Matching
• Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA)
EXPERIMENTALVALIDITY
• To make a significant contribution to the development of knowledge, an
experiment must be valid. Campbell and Stanley (1966) described two types of
experimental validity, internal validity and external validity.
• InternalValidity - An experiment has internal validity to the extent that the factors
that have been manipulated (independent variables) actually have a genuine effect
on the observed consequences (dependent variables) in the experimental setting.
• External validity - External validity is the extent to which the variable relationships
can be generalized to other settings, other treatment variables, other
measurement variables, and other populations.
• Internal validity is very difficult to achieve in the non laboratory setting of the
behavioral experiment in which there are so many extraneous variables to attempt
to control.When experimental controls are tightened to achieve internal validity,
the more artificial, less realistic situation may prevail, reducing the external validity
or generalizability of the experiment.
• Some compromise is inevitable so that a reasonable balance may be established
between control and generalizability between internal and external validity.
Threats to Internal ExperimentalValidity
• Maturation
• History
• Testing
• Unstable Instrumentation
• Statistical Regression
• Selection Bias
• Experimental Mortality
• Experimenter Bias
Threats to External ExperimentalValidity
• Campbell and Stanley (1966) discussed the factors that may lead to reduced
generalizability of research to other settings, persons, variables, and
measurement instruments.The factors they discussed include the following
• Interference ofPriorTreatment
• The Artificiality of the Experimental Setting
• The Extent ofTreatmentVerification
EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN
• Experimental design is the blueprint of the procedures that enable the researcher to test
hypotheses by reaching valid conclusions about relationships between independent and
dependent variable
• Selection of a particular design is based on the purposes of the experiment, the type of
variables to be manipulated, and the conditions or limiting factors under which it is
conducted.
• The design deals with such practical problems as how subjects are to be assigned to
experimental and control groups, the way variables are to be manipulated and controlled,
the way extraneous variables are to be controlled, how observations are to be made, and
the type of statistical analysis to be employed in interpreting data relationships.
• The adequacy of experimental designs is judged by the degree to which they eliminate or
minimize threats to experimental validity.Three categories are presented here:
• 1. Pre-experimental design is the least effective, for it provides either no control group or no
way of equating the groups that are used.
• 2.True experimental design employs randomization to provide for control of the equivalence
of groups and exposure to treatment.
• 3. Quasi-experimental design provides a less satisfactory degree of control, used
• only when randomization is not feasible.
REFERENCES
• Babbie, E. (2010). The practice of social research (12th ed.). Belmont, CA:Wadsworth.
• Esterberg, K. G. (2002). Qualitative methods in social research. Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill.
• Garfinkle, H. (1967). Studies in ethnomethodology. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
• Gubrium, J. F., & Holstein, J. A. (2000).Analyzing interpretative practice. In N. Denzin &Y.S. Lincoln
(Eds.), The handbook of qualitative research (2nd ed.), (pp. 487-508).ThousandOaks, CA: SAGE Publications.
• Heritage, J. C. (1984). Garfinkel & ethnomethodology. Cambridge: UK. Polity Press.
• Krippendorff, K. (2004a).Content analysis: An introduction to its methodology (2nd ed.).ThousandOaks,
CA: Sage.
• Krippendorf, K. (2004b). Reliability in content analysis: Some common misconceptions and
recommendations. HumanCommunication Research, 30(3), 411-433. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-
2958.2004.tb00738.x
• Lombard, M., Snyder-Duch, J., & Campenella Bracken, C. (2010). Practical resources for assessing and
reporting intercoder reliability in content analysis research projects. Retrieved
from http://matthewlombard.com/reliability/#How%20should%20researchers%20calculate%20intercoder
%20reliability%20What%20software%20is%20available

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EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH DESIGN.pptx

  • 1. EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH DESIGN COURSE I - RESEARCH METHODOLOGY Saba Jahan Research Scholar KSOU, Mysuru
  • 2. CHARACTERISTICS OF EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH • Experimentation is the classic method of the science laboratory where elements manipulated and effects observed can be controlled. • It is the most sophisticated, exacting, and powerful method for discovering and developing an organized body of knowledge. • Experimental research provides a systematic and logical method for answering the research question • The immediate purpose of experimentation is to predict events in the experimental setting. • The ultimate purpose is to generalize the variable relationships so that they may be applied outside the laboratory to a wider population of interest. • Experimentation provides a method of hypothesis testing.
  • 3. PROCESS OF EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH • After experimenters define a problem, they propose a tentative answer or hypothesis. • They test the hypothesis and confirm or refute it in the light of the controlled variable relationship that they have observed. It is important to note that the confirmation or rejection of the hypothesis is stated in terms of probability rather than certainty. • Experimenters manipulate certain stimuli, treatments, or environmental conditions and observe how the condition or behavior of the subject is affected or changed. • Their manipulation is deliberate and systematic. • They must be aware of other factors that could influence the outcome and remove or control them so that they can establish a logical association between manipulated factors and observed effects.
  • 4. EXPERIMENTAL AND CONTROL GROUP • An experiment involves the comparison of the effects of a particular treatment with that of a different treatment or of no treatment. • In a simple conventional experiment, reference is usually made to an experimental group and to a control group. • These groups are equated as nearly as possible.The experimental group is exposed to the influence of the factor under consideration; the control group is not. • Observations are then made to determine what difference appears or what change or modification occurs in the experimental as contrasted with the control group. • In medical experiments a harmless or inert substitute is administered to the control group to offset the psychological effect of medication. • A similar term Hawthorne Effect was introduced into the psychological literature.
  • 5. VARIABLES • Independent and DependentVariables • Variables are the conditions or characteristics that the experimenter manipulates, controls, or observes. • The independent variables are the conditions or characteristics that the experimenter manipulates or controls in his or her attempt to ascertain their relationship to observed phenomena. • The dependent variables are the conditions or characteristics that appear, disappear, or change as the experimenter introduces, removes, or changes independent variables. • There are two types of independent variables: treatment and organismic or attribute variables. • Treatment variables are those factors that the experimenter manipulates and to which he or she assigns subjects. • Attribute variables are those characteristics that cannot be altered by the experimenter such as age, sex, race, and intelligence level that have already been determined, but the experimenter can decide to include them or remove them as variables to be studied.
  • 6. • ConfoundingVariables - Confounding variables are those aspects of a study or sample that might influence the dependent variable (outcome measure) and whose effect may be confused with the effects of the independent variable. • Confounding variables are of two types: intervening and extraneous variables. • InterveningVariables - In many types of behavioral research the relationship between the independent and dependent variables is not a simple one of stimulus to response. Certain variables that cannot be controlled or measured directly may have an important effect on the outcome.These modifying variables intervene between the cause and the effect. • anxiety, fatigue, motivation are examples of intervening variables. • They are difficult to define in operational, observable, terms, but they cannot be ignored. Rather, they must be controlled as much as is feasible through the use of appropriate designs.
  • 7. • ExtraneousVariables • Extraneous variables are those uncontrolled variables (i.e., variables not manipulated by the experimenter) that may have a significant influence on the results of a study. • Many research conclusions are questionable because of the influence of these extraneous variables. • Although it is impossible to eliminate all extraneous variables, sound experimental design enables the researcher to largely neutralize their influence.
  • 8. CONTROLLING CONFOUNDINGVARIABLES • Removing theVariable • Randomization • Matching Cases • BalancingCases or Group Matching • Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA)
  • 9. EXPERIMENTALVALIDITY • To make a significant contribution to the development of knowledge, an experiment must be valid. Campbell and Stanley (1966) described two types of experimental validity, internal validity and external validity. • InternalValidity - An experiment has internal validity to the extent that the factors that have been manipulated (independent variables) actually have a genuine effect on the observed consequences (dependent variables) in the experimental setting. • External validity - External validity is the extent to which the variable relationships can be generalized to other settings, other treatment variables, other measurement variables, and other populations. • Internal validity is very difficult to achieve in the non laboratory setting of the behavioral experiment in which there are so many extraneous variables to attempt to control.When experimental controls are tightened to achieve internal validity, the more artificial, less realistic situation may prevail, reducing the external validity or generalizability of the experiment. • Some compromise is inevitable so that a reasonable balance may be established between control and generalizability between internal and external validity.
  • 10. Threats to Internal ExperimentalValidity • Maturation • History • Testing • Unstable Instrumentation • Statistical Regression • Selection Bias • Experimental Mortality • Experimenter Bias
  • 11. Threats to External ExperimentalValidity • Campbell and Stanley (1966) discussed the factors that may lead to reduced generalizability of research to other settings, persons, variables, and measurement instruments.The factors they discussed include the following • Interference ofPriorTreatment • The Artificiality of the Experimental Setting • The Extent ofTreatmentVerification
  • 12. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN • Experimental design is the blueprint of the procedures that enable the researcher to test hypotheses by reaching valid conclusions about relationships between independent and dependent variable • Selection of a particular design is based on the purposes of the experiment, the type of variables to be manipulated, and the conditions or limiting factors under which it is conducted. • The design deals with such practical problems as how subjects are to be assigned to experimental and control groups, the way variables are to be manipulated and controlled, the way extraneous variables are to be controlled, how observations are to be made, and the type of statistical analysis to be employed in interpreting data relationships. • The adequacy of experimental designs is judged by the degree to which they eliminate or minimize threats to experimental validity.Three categories are presented here: • 1. Pre-experimental design is the least effective, for it provides either no control group or no way of equating the groups that are used. • 2.True experimental design employs randomization to provide for control of the equivalence of groups and exposure to treatment. • 3. Quasi-experimental design provides a less satisfactory degree of control, used • only when randomization is not feasible.
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  • 14. REFERENCES • Babbie, E. (2010). The practice of social research (12th ed.). Belmont, CA:Wadsworth. • Esterberg, K. G. (2002). Qualitative methods in social research. Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill. • Garfinkle, H. (1967). Studies in ethnomethodology. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall. • Gubrium, J. F., & Holstein, J. A. (2000).Analyzing interpretative practice. In N. Denzin &Y.S. Lincoln (Eds.), The handbook of qualitative research (2nd ed.), (pp. 487-508).ThousandOaks, CA: SAGE Publications. • Heritage, J. C. (1984). Garfinkel & ethnomethodology. Cambridge: UK. Polity Press. • Krippendorff, K. (2004a).Content analysis: An introduction to its methodology (2nd ed.).ThousandOaks, CA: Sage. • Krippendorf, K. (2004b). Reliability in content analysis: Some common misconceptions and recommendations. HumanCommunication Research, 30(3), 411-433. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468- 2958.2004.tb00738.x • Lombard, M., Snyder-Duch, J., & Campenella Bracken, C. (2010). Practical resources for assessing and reporting intercoder reliability in content analysis research projects. Retrieved from http://matthewlombard.com/reliability/#How%20should%20researchers%20calculate%20intercoder %20reliability%20What%20software%20is%20available