Cambridge Handbook of Research Methods and Statistics for the Social and Behavioral Sciences: Volume 2
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Cambridge Handbook of Research Methods and Statistics for the Social and Behavioral Sciences: Volume 2
Volume 2: Performing Research
Nichols, Austin Lee; Edlund, John E.
Cambridge University Press
11/2024
758
Mole
9781009009713
Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição
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Preface; Part I. Quantitative Data Collection Sources: 1. Student samples in research Michael Basil; 2. Mechanical Turk: a versatile tool in the Behavioral Scientist's Toolkit Aaron J. Moss, David Hauser, Cheskie Rosenzweig, Jonathan Robinson and Leib Litman; 3. Social media research Rosanna E. Guadagno and Alberto F. Olivieri; 4. Prolific: crowdsourcing academic online research Eyal Peer; 5. Field research Sherry Jueyu Wu; 6. Organizational research Victor E. Sojo and Melissa A. Wheeler; 7. Integrating culture in research Brien K. Ashdown and Angela T. Maitner; 8. Mixed methods and multimethod research Judith Schoonenboom; Part II. Important Methodological Considerations: 9. Reliability Tenko Raykov; 10. Measurement validity in the social and behavioral sciences: some 'Whys' and 'Hows' John J. Skowronski; 11. Statistical power: how not to miss what's right in front of you Erin M. Buchanan; 12. Interdisciplinary and integrative research Rick Szostak; 13. the importance of replication Jon E. Grahe and Kelly M. Cuccolo; 14. The inner workings of registered reports Zoltan Dienes; Part III. Self-Report Measures: 15. Self-Report measures Ting Yan; 16. Question and questionnaire design Sierra Davis Thomander and Jon A. Krosnick; Part IV. Behavioral Measures: 17. Reaction time measures Jeremy D. Heider; 18. Eyetracking research Anjali K. Jogeshwar and Jeff B. Pelz; Part V. Physiological Measures: 19. Measuring hormones: considerations for biospecimen collection, assay and analysis Shannin N. Moody, Amali I. Stephens, Jenny Mai Phan, Olga Miocevic, Amita Kapoor, Wen Wang, Allissa L. Van Steenis, Scott Le, Lotte van Dammen, Elizabeth A Shirtcliff; 20. Cardiovascular measures for social and behavioral research Mary G. Carey; 21. Electrodermal activity (EDA)-Applications and challenges Md-Billal Hossain, Youngsun Kong, Hugo F. Posada-Quintero and Ki H. Chon; 22. Surface electromyography Joseph S. Baschnagel, Moet Aita and Michael McTighe; 23. EEG & ERP Christian Panitz, Richard T. Ward, Jourdan Pouliot and Andreas Keil; Part VI. Qualitative Data Collection Sources: 24. Open-Ended survey questions Gloria Fraser; 25. Qualitative archival data: a call to creativity Constance Jones and Andrea Wiemann; 26. Interviews: processes, strategies, and reflections Zoe B. Corwin and Jordan Harper; 27. Case studies - A personal account of choices and dilemmas Christine Meyer; 28. Focus groups Noa Amir, Chandana Guha, Simon Carter and Allison Jaure; 29. Observational data Lesley Baillie, Shanlee Higgins.
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Preface; Part I. Quantitative Data Collection Sources: 1. Student samples in research Michael Basil; 2. Mechanical Turk: a versatile tool in the Behavioral Scientist's Toolkit Aaron J. Moss, David Hauser, Cheskie Rosenzweig, Jonathan Robinson and Leib Litman; 3. Social media research Rosanna E. Guadagno and Alberto F. Olivieri; 4. Prolific: crowdsourcing academic online research Eyal Peer; 5. Field research Sherry Jueyu Wu; 6. Organizational research Victor E. Sojo and Melissa A. Wheeler; 7. Integrating culture in research Brien K. Ashdown and Angela T. Maitner; 8. Mixed methods and multimethod research Judith Schoonenboom; Part II. Important Methodological Considerations: 9. Reliability Tenko Raykov; 10. Measurement validity in the social and behavioral sciences: some 'Whys' and 'Hows' John J. Skowronski; 11. Statistical power: how not to miss what's right in front of you Erin M. Buchanan; 12. Interdisciplinary and integrative research Rick Szostak; 13. the importance of replication Jon E. Grahe and Kelly M. Cuccolo; 14. The inner workings of registered reports Zoltan Dienes; Part III. Self-Report Measures: 15. Self-Report measures Ting Yan; 16. Question and questionnaire design Sierra Davis Thomander and Jon A. Krosnick; Part IV. Behavioral Measures: 17. Reaction time measures Jeremy D. Heider; 18. Eyetracking research Anjali K. Jogeshwar and Jeff B. Pelz; Part V. Physiological Measures: 19. Measuring hormones: considerations for biospecimen collection, assay and analysis Shannin N. Moody, Amali I. Stephens, Jenny Mai Phan, Olga Miocevic, Amita Kapoor, Wen Wang, Allissa L. Van Steenis, Scott Le, Lotte van Dammen, Elizabeth A Shirtcliff; 20. Cardiovascular measures for social and behavioral research Mary G. Carey; 21. Electrodermal activity (EDA)-Applications and challenges Md-Billal Hossain, Youngsun Kong, Hugo F. Posada-Quintero and Ki H. Chon; 22. Surface electromyography Joseph S. Baschnagel, Moet Aita and Michael McTighe; 23. EEG & ERP Christian Panitz, Richard T. Ward, Jourdan Pouliot and Andreas Keil; Part VI. Qualitative Data Collection Sources: 24. Open-Ended survey questions Gloria Fraser; 25. Qualitative archival data: a call to creativity Constance Jones and Andrea Wiemann; 26. Interviews: processes, strategies, and reflections Zoe B. Corwin and Jordan Harper; 27. Case studies - A personal account of choices and dilemmas Christine Meyer; 28. Focus groups Noa Amir, Chandana Guha, Simon Carter and Allison Jaure; 29. Observational data Lesley Baillie, Shanlee Higgins.
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