Intended for graduate students in personality and social psychology, this indispensable collection provides clear, detailed coverage of conceptual and practical issues in research design. In this third edition, leading experts address specific methods and offer contemporary commentary, reflecting the rapid changes of this dynamic area of research.
This indispensable collection provides extensive, yet accessible coverage of conceptual and practical issues in research design in personality and social psychology. Using numerous examples and clear guidelines, especially for conducting complex statistical analysis, leading experts address specific methods and areas of research to capture a definitive overview of contemporary practice. Updated and expanded, this third edition engages with the most important methodological innovations over the past decade, offering a timely perspective on research practice in the field. To reflect such rapid advances, this volume includes commentary on particularly timely areas of development such as social neuroscience, mobile sensing methods, and innovative statistical applications. Seasoned and early-career researchers alike will find a range of tools, methods, and practices that will help improve their research and develop new conceptual and methodological possibilities. Supplementary online materials available on Cambridge Core.
Papildus informācija
Written by experts in personality and social psychology, this essential resource presents and explains contemporary methodology.
1. Introduction Tessa West, Harry T. Reis, and Charles M. Judd;
2. The
romance of research methods Mahzarin R. Banaji; Part I. Before You Dive In:
Foundational Issues in Social Science:
3. Ethical issues in psychological
science: studying humans, analyzing data, publishing findings Chris Crandall,
Roger Giner-Sorolla and Monica Biernat;
4. Replication in social and
personality psychology Klaus Fiedler and Florian Ermark;
5. Realizing the
promise of diverse and interdisciplinary team science Stephanie Tepper and
Neil A. Lewis, Jr.;
6. A cross-cultural method in social and personality
psychology: the cultural imagination Shigehiro Oishi and Ayse K. Uskul; Part
II. Basic Design Considerations to Know, No Matter What You're Research is
About:
7. Research design and issues of validity Marilynn B. Brewer and
William D. Crano;
8. Experimental design Eliot R. Smith;
9.
Quasi-experimental designs Leandre R. Fabrigar, Thomas I. Vaughan-Johnston
and Duane T. Wegener;
10. Field research methods Sherry Jueyu Wu and Rebecca
Littman; Part III. Deep Dives on Methods and Tools for Testing Your Question
of Interest:
11. Survey research Kristen Olson;
12. Conducting surveys and
experiments on the internet Chadly Stern and Jordan R. Axt;
13. Methods for
studying everyday experience in its natural context Harry T. Reis, Laura
Sels, and Shelly L. Gable;
14. Mobile sensing methods Ramona Schoedel and
Matthias R. Mehl;
15. Language research in social-personality psychology
Molly E. Ireland and James W. Pennebaker;
16. Collecting digital footprints
in the wild Michal Kosinski;
17. Behavioral observation and coding Katherine
R. Thorson and Tessa V. West;
18. Automaticity and implicit measures Bertram
Gawronski;
19. Social neuroendocrinology Wendy Berry Mendes;
20. Multivariate
neuroimaging in social and personality psychology Robert S. Chavez, William
A. Cunningham, and Elliot T. Berkman; Part IV. Understanding What Your Data
are Telling You about Psychological Process:
21. Measurement: reliability,
construct validation, and scale construction William Revelle and Kayla M.
Garner;
22. Advanced psychometrics Patrick E. Shrout and Mao Mogami;
23.
Dealing with repeated measures: design decisions and analytic strategies for
over time data Amie M. Gordon and Katherine R. Thorson;
24. Random factors
and research generalization Charles M. Judd and David A. Kenny;
25. Mediation
analysis Amanda Montoya;
26. Mathematical and computational models Karl
Christoph Klauer;
27. Meta-Analysis Judith A. Hall and David Miller.
Harry T. Reis, Professor of Psychology at the University of Rochester and past Editor of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, has published over 250 papers and is known for methodological innovation. He has received career contribution awards from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology and the International Association for Relationship Research. Tessa West, Professor of Psychology at New York University, is known for her methodological expertise and research on interpersonal perception. She has received the Louis Kidder Early Career Award and the Theoretical Innovation Prize from the Foundation of Personality and Social Psychology. She is also an elected fellow for the Association of Psychological Science and the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Charles M. Judd is College Professor of Distinction Emeritus at the University of ColoradoBoulder and Visiting Professor at Oxford University. He is past Editor of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology and the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. He has won numerous awards, contributed more than 150 articles, and authored or edited a dozen books.