This presentation is prepared as part of the Course assignment of “Public Health Research” for the Master's Degree of Public Health (MPH), Pokhara University and can be used as reference materials. The content and facts included in the presentation are as of information available till February 2023 and no conflict of interest is associated with the presentation. The presentation is prepared by Sagar Parajuli & Raju Prasad Sah.
Validity and Reliability Threats and appropriate tool.pptx
1. Validity and Reliability Threats, Construction
and use of appropriate research tools to
reduce threats
Raju Prasad Sah
Sagar Parajuli
MPH Second Semester 2023
School of Health & Allied Sciences
Pokhara University
2. 2/24/2023
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Presentation Outlines
Introduction to Validity and
Reliability in research
Basics about Threats
Threats to Internal Validity
Threats to External Validity
Reliability Threats
Construction and use of
appropriate research tools to
minimize threats
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Validity in Research
Validity is the extent to which test or method measures what is
supposed and intended to measure.. A test is considered valid if it truly
measures what it is supposed to measure without any biases or
inaccuracies.
The validity of a research study refers to how well results among
study participants represent true findings among similar individuals
outside the study.
Validity in research refers to the extent to which a study accurately
measures what it claims to measure.
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Validity in Research
Types of Validity
Face validity: Relevance of a measurement appear obvious
Content validity: Measurement of all variable components
Construct validity: Development of construct based-on established theory
Criterion validity: Measurement and in comparison with reference
Internal validity: Extent to which a study accurately measures what it
claims to measure.
External validity: Extent to which we can generalize the findings of a
study to other measures, settings or groups
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Reliability in Research
Extent or Degree to which a measure gives same results on repeated
observations, referred as repeatability or reproducibility
Reliability refers to the consistency of the measure. High reliability
indicates that measurement system produces similar results under the
same conditions.
Types of Reliability
a) Internal reliability: extent to which a measure is consistent
within itself
b) External Reliability: extent to which measure is consistent when
assessed over time and on different individuals, Test-retest and
Inter-rater method
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Basic about Threats in Research
Factors that cause or are source of an errors and bias in research
Affects validity and reliability of research
Threats in Research mainly can be categorized as
a) Threats to Validity
b) Threats to Reliability
Appropriate research design, use of scientifically proven tools and
techniques, use of appropriate research method and approaches,
sound understanding of research on researcher are key for minimizing
threats in research.
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Threats to Internal Validity
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Threats to
Internal
Validity
Threats associated
with participants
Selection Attrition History Maturation
Threats associated
with Measurement
Regression
Instru-
mentation
Testing
effect
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Threats to Internal Validity
• Selection; difference in participant
characteristics
• Confounding Variables
• Experimental Mortality; loss to
follow up due to illness, relocation,
absent
• Instrumentation; instrument
decay, data collector
characteristics and bias
• History; previous or concurrent
event influencing outcome or
result
1
0
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Threats to Internal Validity
• Location; place of data collection or intervention conducted
• Maturation; change in study participant that might influence result
like ageing
• Testing; pretest influencing post-test
• Attitude of Subjects; subject opinion and participation, Hawthorne
effect
• Regression
• Diffusion; resentful demoralization
• Implementation; difference in execution/methods/procedure
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Threats to External Validity
External validity is the extent to which
we can generalize the findings of a study
to other measures, settings or groups.
Referred as generalizability and
includes Population and ecological
validity.
Sampling bias: Sample not
representative of population
History
Observer bias
Hawthorne effect
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Threats to Other Validity
Threats to External Validity
Testing effect; Pre and post test affecting outcomes
Situation effect
Threats to other Validity
• Threats to construct validity- faulty construct in research designing
• Threats to statistical conclusion validity due to Type I and II errors
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Threats to Validity in Qualitative Research
Researcher bias refers to any kind of negative influence of researcher’s
knowledge, or assumptions, of the study, including the influence of his or
her assumptions of the design, analysis or, even, sampling strategy.
Reactivity refers to a possible influence of the researcher on the studied
situation and people.
Participant bias refers to situation where participants do not provide
honest responses for any reason, which may include them perceiving a
given topic as a threat, or them being willing to ‘please’ the researcher
with responses they believe are desirable.
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Threats to Reliability
Reliability: repeatability, reproducibility referred sometimes as
dependability in qualitative researches
Threats to reliability: Factors that cause or are source of an errors in
research
Researcher (Observer) error: human error
o Inter-observer variation
o Intra-observer variation
Environmental changes
Participant changes; change in participant during research process
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Key to minimizing threats in research
Ensuring an appropriate methodology as per characteristics of study
Standardization of the conditions under which the research study is
carried out will help minimize threats from history and instrumentation.
Obtain as much information as possible about the participants in the
research study minimizes threats from mortality and selection.
Obtain as much information as possible about the procedural details of
the research study, for example, where and when the study occurs,
minimizing threats from history and instrumentation.
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Minimizing Reliability & Validity Threats in Research
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Key to minimizing threats in research
Choose an appropriate research design
Replications counter almost all threats by enhancing generalizability to
other settings, populations and conditions.
• Field experiments; pre-testing counter testing and situation effects by
using natural contexts.
• Probability Sampling counters selection bias
• Recalibration or reprocessing also counters selection bias using
algorithms to correct weighting of factors (e.g., age) within study samples.
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Minimizing Reliability & Validity Threats in Research
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Key to minimizing reliability threats in research
Researcher Reliability: ensuring researcher, data collector and
enumerator well trained and aware of an purpose of the study, check
coding to ensure codes are entered accurately
Variations in observations: shifting time and place of an observations
Test-retest method
Split-half method: employed to ensure reliability by soliciting a number of
answers from a participant to the same question asked in a variety of
ways.
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Minimizing Reliability & Validity Threats in Research
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Construction of appropriate tool to minimize Threats
Key consideration for choosing an appropriate tool
Study design and the objectives of study
Data collection technique
Research settings
Nature and characteristics of study participants
Ethical considerations
Design validity and test validity
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Construction of appropriate tool to minimize Threats
Process for Tool Development
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Step I
Planning &
Identification of Tool
• Setting objectives of
study
• Listing variables under
study
• Designing tool based
on technique
Step II
Tool Development
• Transforming variables
under study into tool
like questionnaires,
checklists, guideline
• Assessing tools with
objectives of study
Step III
Tool Validation
• Pre-testing (Field
Experiment)
• Assessment of Internal
reliability and validity
(Cronbach’s alpha-split
half method, test-
retest, parallel method)
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Appropriate tool to minimize Threats
Choosing an appropriate tool
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Threats to Validity and
Reliability
Appropriate Tool to minimize Threats
Selection of study participants-
Selection bias
Inclusion & exclusion criteria defining study
participants, eligibility checklists
FGD participant Guidelines, IDI, KII Guidelines
Attrition Follow-up timeline provided to study participants
Maturation Maturation factor ‘of possible significant impact’
addressing in Questionnaires
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Appropriate tool to minimize Threats
Choosing an appropriate tool
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Threats to Validity
and Reliability
Appropriate Tool to minimize Threats
Cofounding variables Questionaries addressing confounding variables,
Guidelines for Interview & group discussion
Regression & statistical
bias
Use of statistical tool based on data, addressing outlier,
skewness
Instrumentation Test-retest method, Test record & report
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Construction of appropriate tool to minimize Threats
Key consideration for choosing an appropriate tool
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Threats to Validity and
Reliability
Appropriate Tool to minimize Threats
Researcher bias Checklists ensuring researcher competencies (Knowledge,
researching procedure)
Measurement bias
Reliability Threat
Management
Use of appropriate instruments for measurement, Calibration
record
Test-retest reliability
Parallel reliability- Observation checklist, Interview Guideline
Inter-rater reliability
Inter-consistency- Split half method
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References
• Babbie, E. R. (2010) “The Practice of Social Research” Cengage Learning
• Allen, M. J., & Yen, W. M. (1979). Introduction to measurement theory. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
• Barlow, D. H., & Hersen, M. (1984). Single case experimental designs: Strategies for studying behavior change (2nd ed.).
New York: Pergamon.
• Cooper, J. O., Heron, T. E., & Heward, W. L. (1987). Applied behavior analysis. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co.
• Johnson, S. M., & Bolstad, O. D. (1973). Methodological issues in naturalistic observation: Some problems and solutions
for field research. In L. A. Hamerlynck, L. C. Handy, & E. J. Mash (Eds.), Behavior change: Methodology, concepts and
practice (pp. 7-67). Champaign, IL: Research Press.
• Kazdin, A. E. (1977). Artefact, bias, and complexity of assessment: the ABCs of reliability. Journal of Applied Behavior
Analysis, 10, 141-150.
• Kerlinger, F. N. (1964). Foundations of behavioral research: Educational and psychological inquiry. New York: Holt,
Rinehart and Winston Inc.
• Johnston, J. M., & Pennypacker, H. S. (1993). Strategies and tactics of behavioral research (2nd ed.). Hillsdale, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
• Cohen, L., Manion, L., Morrison, K, & Morrison, R.B. (2007) “Research methods in education” Routledge
• Wilson, J. (2010) “Essentials of Business Research: A Guide to Doing Your Research Project” SAGE Publications
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Thank You!
Note: It is important to understand that threats to research reliability and validity can
never be totally eliminated, however researchers need to strive to minimize this threat as
much as possible.