Historical and conceptual issues in psychology, by Brysbaert, M and Rastle, K (second edition) - a summary
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Foundation of psychology
Chapter 11
The contribution of quantitative and qualitative research methods
Quantitative research methods: research methods based on quantifiable data; are associated with the natural-science approach based on the hypothetico-deductive method.
Assumptions underlying quantitative research methods
There is an outside reality that can be discovered
Quantitative psychologists start from the assumption that phenomena in the world have an existence outside people’s minds.
They defend the idea that humans can discover reality by using the scientific method.
They are well aware of the fact that science is not a linear accumulation of facts but proceeds through trial and error. But are convinced that in the long term the scientific method based on the hypothetico-deductive model leads to an understanding of reality → scientific knowledge is cumulative
The main aim of scientific research is to find universal causal relationships
Researchers are primarily interested in discovering relationships between causes and effects.
How general are principles? And how do humans function?
Ideally they hope the mechanisms they discover will apply to all humans.
Trying to avoid confounds and sources of noise
Users of quantitative research methods are extremely vigilant about the possible intrusion of undesired factors into their designs.
They try to maximally control the circumstances under which they run their studies
They also try to eliminate the impact of random variables called noise.
Suspicion about the researcher’s input
A source of confounding and noise that is of particular interest to quantitative psychology researchers is the researcher him- or herself.
To protect themselves against biases and noise, quantitative researchers make use of standardised measurements and instruments.
Progress through falsification
Researchers constantly try to prove each other wrong.
Research methods are divided into three broad orientations
Descriptive research
Observation of numerical data
Detailed observation is the start of scientific research.
Typical for quantitative research is that the data are gathered in a numerical form, either by collecting measurements or by counting frequencies of occurrence.
Before researchers collect data, they have a good idea of how they will analyse them; what types of measurements they will obtain and what types of statistics they can apply to summarise and evaluate the data.
Large samples and a few data points per participant
The vast majority of descriptive quantitative studies involve the collection of a limited amount of data from a reasonably large group of participants.
Two main reasons to include large groups
Descriptive research usually is only the first step of a quantitative research programme, because researchers want to know what caused the data they observe.
To discover cause-effect relations, a fist move is to find out which events (variables) are related.
Relational research
Correlations
The way to find out whether two variables are related according to quantitative psychologists is to collect measures of both variables and to correlate them.
These correlations also provide information about how strong the correlation is.
People do not seem to be good at detecting which variables are correlated.
Problems involved in the intuitive detection of correlations by humans
Factor analysis
Statistical correlations make it possible to investigate the pattern of correlations between any number of variables.
Factor analysis: a statistical technique calculating how many factors are needed to account for the correlations between the variables measured and how these variables relate to the factors.
Experimental research
Correlations do not allow researchers to be sure about causes
Relational research does not allow to be certain about the origin of the correlation.
Experiments to determine cause-effect relations
To be able to draw firm conclusions about cause and effect, quantitative psychologists will set up an experiment in which they manipulate the suspected cause and see whether this has an effect on the phenomenon they are examining.
Controlling for confounding variables
Only the suspected causes are manipulated and the resulting changes in the phenomenon registered.
Everything else must be held constant.
Confounding variable: variable that was not taken into account in the study and that may be the origin of the effect observed.
To address the confounds, experimental psychologists introduce an increasing number of controls.
Or they run several experiments on the same topic and look for converging evidence across studies.
Experiments are not always possible
Not all issues in psychology can be addressed experimentally.
This may be one of the reasons why progress in psychology is harder to achieve than in other sciences.
Strengths of quantitative research methods
The application of powerful statistical analysis enables researches to detect nearly every pattern of association in large datasets.
The application of falsification tests prevents wrong ideas and weak theories from thriving for too long.
Limits of quantitative methods
No interest in the person behind the participant
The research is designed in such a way that each participant returns one or a few numbers, which can be used in statistical analysis.
Participants are confronted with researchers who shun close interactions during the data gathering because they fear such interactions might invalidate the study.
The lack of interest in the person behind the participant is of particular concern when the research concerns real-life situations.
In these situations psychologists can learn a lot by listening to the experiences and opinions of the people involved.
Research is too much driven by what can be measured numerically and tested experimentally
Quantitative psychologists have a bias to limit their research to topics that can easily by measured.
Quantitative imperative: a bias only to find measurable topics interesting because quantitative research methods require numerical data.
Much research has been geared towards questions that can be addressed empirically.
The aspects of mental life that cannot be captured by numbers and that cannot be manipulated in an experiment have been considered of secondary importance
The falsification test lends itself better to destroying ideas than to finding practical solutions to specific problems
The falsification test is primarily geared toward erasing wrong theories rather than generating new ones.
Interim summary
The essence of quantitative research
Qualitative research methods: research methods based on understanding phenomena in their historical and socio-cultural context; are associated with the hermeneutic approach based on understanding the meaning of a situation
Assumptions underlying qualitative research methods
In psychology there is little or no evidence for a reality outside people’s minds
Most qualitative psychologists are not convinced that in psychology there is an objective reality, which can be discovered with the scientific approach.
For them the only reality that matters is the reality as perceived and constructed by people.
There are differences in the degree that the various methods question the existence/importance of an objective reality.
It is more important to understand people’s views rather than their responses to aspects of the environment.
Attempts to control the situation make the setting artificial and impoverished
Quantitative researchers are misguided in their attempts to try to measure ‘reality’ in unbiased ways.
The attempts turn the environment into an artificial setting that robs the participants of their usual ways of interacting and coping with meaningful situations.
The investigator should become an active participant and listen to what the participant has to say.
He should be guided by a constructive desire to understand the meaning of what is going on.
Qualitative researchers acknowledge that the approach they promote entails the danger of the conclusions being influenced by the researcher but argue that:
Immersion and understanding
The point of departure of qualitative psychology is the immersion of the researcher in the situation that is being studied, so that the meaning of the situation can be understood.
The researcher approaches the situation open-mindedly and sees what comes out.
Ideographic vs. nomothetic
Ideographic approach: the conclusions of a study stay limited to the phenomenon under study
Nomothetic approach: a study is run in search of universal principles that exceed the confines of the study.
Induction rather than deduction
Psychologists should pay more attention to inductive reasoning.
Bracketing: requirement in qualitative research to look at a phenomenon with an open mind and to free oneself from preconceptions.
Qualitative research is evidence-based
In qualitative research, too, a study depends on collecting and analysing empirical findings.
In addition, these data must be gathered and made available in such a way that the conclusions can be verified by others.
The main difference in data with quantitative research is that the findings typically are not coded in a numerical formed.
They comprise an organised set of verbal statements that in the researcher’s eyes summarises the examined situation.
Data collection and analysis
Qualitative research stress the importance of ‘rich information’.
Information that in the participant’s eyes adequately describes the situation.
The participants determine what will be found
Data collection
Semi-structured interview: interview in which each interviewee gets a small set of core questions, but for the rest of the time is encouraged to speak freely; achieved by making use of open-ended, non-directive questions.
Focus groups: technique in which a group of participants freely discuss a limited set of questions.
Transcription
The raw materials of semi-structured interviews usually consists of auditory or visual recordings.
These have to be transcribed in written form, so that they can easily be referred to.
The transcription also contains non-verbal signals.
After the transcription, the written records are numbered.
Data analysis
In a qualitative analysis the investigator rewrites the raw materials as a flow chart of core ideas, based on multiple close readings and guided by the questions emphasised by the different approaches.
The analysis requires an adequate classification of the various statements into a number of (recurring) themes and clear ideas of how the components are interconnected.
The researcher tries to encompass the data as comprehensively as possible.
Grounded theory
Grounded theory: qualitative research method that tries to understand what is going on in a particular situation and which, on the basis of a qualitative analysis and induction, tries to come to a theoretical insight grounded in the data
In a grounded theory analysis, the investigator rewrites the raw material on the basis of questions such as ‘What is going on here?’.
On the basis of these questions, the participants’ answers are recorded into a sequence of themes, which are then grouped into higher-order categories.
This makes it possible for a theory to emerge from the data through inductive reasoning.
Phenomenological analysis
Unease with grounded theory
Limitations of grounded theory
Inspiration form Husserl
Hermeneutically inspired psychologists stressed that the primary aim of qualitative research was to examine what reality looked like for the participants, leaving open the question whether in psychology there is something of an objective, person-independent reality.
Edmund Husserl (1859-1938)
Phenomenology.
Stressed that psychology should be a reflective study of consciousness as experienced from the first-person point of view.
It is better for psychology to return to the experience itself.
The human experience was not in the first place a matter of lawful responses to events in the environment, but a system of interrelated meanings, which Husserl called a Gestalt or Lebenswelt.
Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA): qualitative research method in psychology that tries to understand how a phenomenon is experienced by the people involved.
How does IPA work?
IPA resembles very much the analysis of grounded theory.
The main difference is that IPA is centred on how participants make sense of their personal and social world.
It attempts to explore the personal experience and is concerned with the participant’s personal account, not with an understanding of the phenomenon itself.
IPA acknowledges the input form the researcher, who tries to make sense of the participants trying to make sense of their world.
The researcher’s involvement does not mean that the researcher is allowed to introduce obvious biases. Investigators are advised to bracked as much as possible and to approach the new situation open-mindedly.
IPA accepts that some form of meta-interpretation on the part of the researcher is possible.
Key elements of IPA:
Discourse analysis
The linguistic turn in the philosophy of science and in critical psychology
Discourse analysis: qualitative research method that aims to discover how social relations between people are determined by the language they use.
Language is the only topic worth investigating because it makes the world in which humans live.
The linguistic turn in postmodernist writings influenced the development of qualitative research in three ways:
How are relations between people determined by the language they use, and how do people try to achieve goals by means of their language?
All variants of discourse analysis try to determine how participants use discursive resources and what effects it has.
Strengths of qualitative research
Limits of qualitative research
Interim summary
The essence of qualitative research
The two types of research are incompatible
Incompatibility of the underlying paradigms
Psychologists who stress the incompatibility of the quantitative and qualitative methods emphasise the different world views underlying them.
Quantitative psychology’s arguments against the need for qualitative psychology
Qualitative psychology’s arguments against the need for quantitative psychology
Trying to reconcile quantitative and qualitative research methods are attempts to regain lost ground
Psychologists who consider qualitative and quantitative research to be incompatible often mistrust efforts to unite them, because they see these efforts as disguised attempts to regain lost ground.
Two types of research complement each other
The other view is that qualitative and quantitative research methods can be used in tandem depending on the question one wants to answer.
Quantitative research is more than a positivist search for physical laws
Scientists nowadays make a distinction between
Qualitative research is more than a chat with participants
Qualitative research must include
Interim summary
How do quantitative and qualitative research methods relate to each other?
Interim summary
Is philosophy of science useful for psychology?
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This is a summary of the book: Historical and conceptual issues in psychology, by Brysbaert, M and Rastle, K. This book is about the history of Psychology and how now-day psychology came to be. The book is used in the course 'Foundations of psychology' at the second year of
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