4.1 The-Research-Endeavor P1
4.1 The-Research-Endeavor P1
4.1 The-Research-Endeavor P1
Butuan City
2nd Sem., AY 2021-2022
INTRODUCTION
Despite these challenges, researchers have made tremendous strides in understanding many forms of
abnormality in the past 50 years or so. They have overcome many of the challenges of researching
psychopathology by using a multimethod approach, which is, using different methods to study the same
issue.
Any research project involves a basic series of steps designed to obtain and evaluate information
relevant to a problem in a systematic way. This process is often called the scientific method.
First, researchers must select and define a problem. Then a hypothesis, or testable statement of
what we predict will happen in our study, must be formulated. Next, the method for testing the
hypothesis must be chosen and implemented. Once the data have been collected and analyzed,
the researcher draws the appropriate conclusions and documents the results in a research
report.
DEFINING THE PROBLEM AND STATING A HYPOTHESIS
Throughout this chapter, we will examine the idea that stress causes depression. Thus, we must
state a hypothesis, or a testable prediction of what relationship we expect to find in our study.
A hypothesis, "What kind of evidence would support the idea that stress causes depression?"
One hypothesis, then, is that people who have recently been under stress are more
likely to be depressed than people who have not.
The alternative to our hypothesis is that people who experience stress are not more
likely to develop depression than people who do not experience stress
This prediction that there is no relationship between the phenomena we are
studying-in this case, stress and depression-is called the null hypothesis. Results
often support the null hypothesis instead of the researcher's primary
hypothesis.
A group of people called human participants committee is present in all colleges and universities to
review the procedures of studies done with humans to ensure that the benefits of the study
substantially outweigh any risks to the participants and that the risks to the participants have been
minimized.
CORRELATIONAL STUDIES
Correlational studies examine the relationship between an independent variable and a dependent
variable without manipulating either variable. There are many kinds of correlational studies.
The most common type of correlational study is a study of two or more continuous variables. A
continuous variable is measured along a continuum.
Anotheris a group comparison study to look at the relationship between people's membership
in a particular group and their scores on some other variable.
Both continuous variable studies and group comparison studies can be either cross-sectional - observing
people at only one point in time - or longitudinal - observing people on two or more occasions over
time.
In most correlational studies, the relationship between the variables is indicated by a correlation
coefficient.
SELECTING A SAMPLE
A representative sample is a sample that is highly similar to the population of interest in terms
of sex, ethnicity, age, and other important variables.
o This is done by random sampling
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES
Epidemiology is the study of the frequency and distribution of a disorder, or a group of disorders, in a
population.
Epidemiological studies are affected by many of the same limitations as correlational studies.
First, they cannot establish that any risk factor causes a disorder. Also, as in correlational
studies, third variables may explain the relationship between any risk factor and the rates of a
disorder.