APA Handbook of Research Methods in Psychology
Volume 1: Foundations, Planning, Measures, and Psychometrics Volume 2: Research Designs: Quantitative, Qualitative, Neuropsychological, and Biological Volume 3: Data Analysis and Research Publication
AvHarris Cooper,Marc N. Coutanche
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Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum:2023-07-18
- Höjd:203 x 279 x 216 mm
- Vikt:6 950 g
- Språk:Engelska
- Serie:APA Handbooks in Psychology® Series
- Antal sidor:2 205
- Upplaga:2
- Förlag:American Psychological Association
- EAN:9781433841231
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Harris Cooper, PhD, is the Hugo L. Blomquist Professor, Emeritus, in the department of psychology and neuroscience at Duke University. His research interests concern research synthesis and research methodology, and he also studies the application of social and developmental psychology to education policy. His book Research Synthesis and Meta-Analysis: A Step-by-Step Approach (2 7) is in its fifth edition. He is the coeditor of the Handbook of Research Synthesis and Meta-Analysis (3rd ed. 2 9). In 2 7, Dr. Cooper was the recipient of the Frederick Mosteller Award for Contributions to Research Synthesis Methodology, and in 2 8 he received the Ingram Olkin Award for Distinguished Lifetime Contribution to Research Synthesis from the Society for Research Synthesis Methodology. He served as the chair of the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience at Duke University from 2 9 to 2 4, and from 2 7 to 2 8 he served as the dean of social science at Duke. Dr. Cooperchaired the first APA committee that developed guidelines for information about research that should be included in manuscripts submitted to APA journals. He currently serves as the editor of American Psychologist, the flagship journal of the American Psychological Association. Marc N. Coutanche, PhD, is an associate professor of psychology and research scientist in the Learning Research and Development Center at the University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Coutanche directs a program of cognitive neuroscience research and develops and tests new computational techniques to identify and understand the neural information present within neuroimaging data. His work has been funded by the National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, American Psychological Foundation, and other organizations, and he has published in a variety of journals. Dr. Coutanche received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania, and conducted postdoctoral training at Yale University. He received a Howard Hughes Medical Institute International Student Research Fellowship and Ruth L. Kirschstein Postdoctoral National Research Service Award, and was named a 2 9 Rising Star by the Association for Psychological Science. Linda M. McMullen, PhD, is professor emerita of psychology at the University of Saskatchewan, Canada. Over her career, she has contributed to the development of qualitative inquiry in psychology through teaching, curriculum development, and pedagogical scholarship original research and service to the qualitative research community. Dr. McMullen introduced qualitative inquiry into both the graduate and undergraduate curriculum in her home department, taught courses at both levels for many years, and has published articles, coedited special issues, and written a book (Essentials of Discursive Psychology) that is part of the American Psychological Association amp rsquo s series on qualitative methodologies, among other works. She has been engaged with building the Society for Qualitative Inquiry in Psychology (SQIP a section of Division 5 of the APA) into a vibrant scholarly society since its earliest days, and took on many leadership roles while working as a university professor. Dr. McMullen amp rsquo s contributions have been recognized by Division 5 of the APA, the Canadian Psychological Association, and the Saskatchewan Psychological Association. Abigail Panter, PhD, is the senior associate dean for undergraduate education and a professor of psychology in the L. L. Thurstone Psychometric Laboratory at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is past president of the American Psychological Association amp rsquo s Division 5, Quantitative and Qualitative Methods. As a quantitative psychologist, she develops instruments, research designs and data-analytic strategies for applied research questions in higher education, personality, and health. She serves as a program evaluator for UNC amp rsquo s Chancellor amp rsquo s Science Scholars Program, and was also principal investigator for The Finish Line Project, a $3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education that systematically investigated new supports and academic initiatives, especially for first-generation college students. Her books include the APA Dictionary of Statistics and Research Methods (2 4), the APA Handbook of Research Methods in Psychology (first edition 2 2), the Handbook of Ethics in Quantitative Methodology (2 ), and the SAGE Handbook of Methods in Social Psychology (2 4), among others.David Rindskopf, PhD, is distinguished professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center, specializing in research methodology and statistics. His main interests are in Bayesian statistics, causal inference, categorical data analysis, meta-analysis, and latent variable models. He is a fellow of the American Statistical Association and the American Educational Research Association, and is past president of the Society of Multivariate Experimental Psychology and the New York Chapter of the American Statistical Association.Kenneth J. Sher, PhD, is Chancellor amp rsquo s Professor and Curators amp rsquo Distinguished Professor of Psychological Sciences, Emeritus, at the University of Missouri. He received his PhD in clinical psychology from Indiana University ( 98 ) and his clinical internship training at Brown University ( 98 ). His primary areas of research focus on etiological processes in the development of alcohol dependence, factors that affect the course of drinking and alcohol use disorders throughout adulthood, longitudinal research methodology, psychiatric comorbidity, and nosology. At the University of Missouri he directed the predoctoral and postdoctoral training program in alcohol studies, and his research has been continually funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism for more than 35 years. Dr. Sher amp rsquo s research contributions have been recognized by professional societies including the Research Society on Alcoholism and the American Psychological Association, and throughout his career he has been heavily involved in service to professional societies and scholarly publications.
Innehållsförteckning
- Volume . Foundations, Planning, Measures, and PsychometricsEditorial BoardAbout the EditorsContributorsA Note from the PublisherIntroduction: Objectives of Psychological Research and Their Relations to Research MethodsPart I. Philosophical, Ethical, and Societal Underpinnings of Psychological ResearchSection . Philosophical Issues for Research in PsychologyChapter . Perspectives on the Epistemological Bases for Qualitative ResearchCarla Willig Chapter 2. Frameworks for Causal Inference in Psychological SciencePeter M. Steiner, William R. Shadish, and Kristynn J. SullivanSection 2. Ethical and Professional Considerations in Conducting Psychological ResearchChapter 3. Ethics in Psychological Research: Guidelines and RegulationsAdam L. Fried and Kate L. JansenChapter 4. Ethics and Regulation of Research With Nonhuman AnimalsSangeeta Panicker, Chana K. Akins, and Beth Ann RiceSection 3. Cultural and Societal Issues in Conducting Psychological ResearchChapter 5. Cross-Cultural Research MethodsDavid Masumoto and Fons J. R. van de VijverChapter .Research With Populations that Experience MarginalizationGeorge P. Knight, Rebecca M. B. White, Stefanie Martinez-Fuentes, Mark W. Roosa, and Adriana J. Uma amp ntilde a-TaylorPart II. Planning ResearchChapter 7. Developing Testable and Important Research QuestionsFrederick T. L. Leong, Neal Schmitt, and Brent J. LyonsChapter 8. Searching With a Purpose: How to Use Literature Searching to Support Your ResearchDiana Ramirez and Margaret J. FosterChapter 9. Psychological Measurement: Scaling and AnalysisHeather Hayes and Susan E. EmbretsonChapter . Sample Size PlanningKen Kelley, Samantha F. Anderson, and Scott E. MaxwellChapter . Workflow and ReproducibilityOliver KirchkampChapter 2. Obtaining and Evaluating Research FundingJonathan S. Comer and Amanda L. SanchezPart III. Measurement MethodsSection . Behavior ObservationChapter 3. Behavioral ObservationRoger Bakeman and Vicen amp ccedil QueraSection 2. Self-ReportChapter 4. Question Order EffectsLisa Lee, Parvati Krishnamurty, and Struther Van HornChapter 5. Interviews and Interviewing TechniquesAnna MadillChapter . Using Intensive Longitudinal Methods in Psychological ResearchMasumi Iida, Patrick E. Shrout, Jean-Philippe Laurenceau, and Niall BolgerChapter 7. Automated Analyses of Natural Language in Psychological ResearchLaura K. Allen, Arthur C. Graesser, and Danielle S. McNamaraSection 3. Psychological TestsChapter 8. Objective Tests as Instruments of Psychological Theory and ResearchDavid WatsonChapter 9. Norm- and Criterion-Referenced TestingKurt F. GeisingerChapter 2 . The Current Status of amp quot Projective amp quot amp quot Tests amp quot Robert E. McGrath, Alec Twibell, and Elizabeth J. CarrollChapter 2 . Brief Instruments and Short FormsEmily A. Atkinson, Carolyn M. Pearson Carter, Jessica L. Combs Rohr, and Gregory T. SmithSection 4. Chronometric and Psychophysical MeasuresChapter 22. Eye Movements, Pupillometry, and Cognitive ProcessesSimon P. Liversedge, Sara V. Milledge, and Hazel I. BlytheChapter 23. Response TimesRoger RatcliffChapter 24. Psychophysics: Concepts, Methods, and FrontiersAllie C. Hexley, Takuma Morimoto, and Manuel SpitschanSection 5. Measures in PsychophysiologyChapter 25. The Perimetric Physiological Measurement of Psychological ConstructsLouis G. Tassinary, Ursula Hess, Luis M. Carcoba, and Joseph M. OrrChapter 2 . Salivary Hormone AssaysLinda Becker, Nicholas Rohleder, and Oliver C. SchultheissSection . Measures in NeuroscienceChapter 27. Electro- and Magnetoencephalographic Methods in PsychologyEddie Harmon-Jones, David M. Amodio, Philip A. Gable, and Suzanne DikkerChapter 28. Event-Related PotentialsSteven J. LuckChapter 29. Functional NeuroimagingMegan T. deBettencourt, Wilma A. Bainbridge, Monica D. RosenbergChapter 3 . Noninvasive Stimulation of the Cerebral CortexDennis J. L. G. SchutterChapter 3 . Combined Neuroimaging MethodsMarius Moisa and Christian C. RuffChapter 32. Neuroimaging Analysis MethodsYanyu Xiong and Sharlene D. NewmanPart IV. PsychometricsChapter 33. ReliabilitySean P. Lane, Elizabeth N. Aslinger, and Patrick E. ShroutChapter 34. Generalizability TheoryXiaohong Gao and Deborah J. HarrisChapter 35. Construct ValidityKevin J. Grimm and Keith F. WidamanChapter 3 . Item-Level FactorNisha C. Gottfredson, Brian D. Stucky, and A. T. PanterChapter 37. Item Response TheorySteven P. Reise and Tyler M. MooreChapter 38. Measuring Test Performance With Signal Detection Theory TechniquesTeresa A. Treat and Richard J. VikenVolume 2. Research Designs: Quantitative, Qualitative, Neuropsychological, and BiologicalEditorial BoardContributorsPart I. Qualitative Research MethodsSection . Overview of Qualitative MethodsChapter . Developments in Qualitative InquirySarah Riley and Andrea LaMarreChapter 2. Metasynthesis of Qualitative ResearchSally ThorneSection 2. Thematic ApproachesChapter 3. Grounded Theory and Psychological ResearchRobert Thornberg, Elaine Keane, and Malgorzata W amp oacute jcikChapter 4. Thematic AnalysisVirginia Braun and Victoria ClarkeChapter 5. Phenomenological Methodology, Methods, and Procedures for Research in PsychologyFrederick J. WertzSection 3. Narrative and Language-Based ApproachesChapter . Narrative AnalysisJavier Monforte and Brett SmithChapter 7. Ethnomethodology and Conversation AnalysisPaul ten HaveChapter 8. Discourse Analysis and Discursive PsychologyChris McVittie and Andy McKinlaySection 4. Multilayered ApproachesChapter 9. Ethnography in Psychological ResearchElizabeth Fein and Jonathan YahalomChapter . Visual Research in PsychologyPaula Reavey, Jon Prosser, and Steven D. BrownChapter . Researching the TemporalKaren Henwood and Fiona ShiraniPart II. Working Across Epistemologies, Methodologies, and MethodsChapter 2. Mixed Methods Research in PsychologyTimothy C. Guetterman and Analay PerezChapter 3. The amp quot Cases Within Trials amp quot (CWT) Method: An Example of a Mixed-Methods Research DesignDaniel B. FishmanChapter 4. Researching With American Indian and Alaska Native Communities: Pursuing Partnerships for Psychological Inquiry in Service to Indigenous FuturityJoseph P. GoneChapter 5. Participatory Action Research as Movement Toward Radical Relationality, Epistemic Justice, and Transformative Intervention: A Multivocal ReflectionUrmitapa Dutta, Jesica Siham Fern amp aacute ndez, Anne Galletta, and Regina Day LanghoutPart III. Sampling Across People and TimeChapter . Introduction to Survey SamplingRoger Tourangeau and Ting YanChapter 7. EpidemiologyRumi Kato Price and Heidi H. TastetChapter 8. Collecting Longitudinal Data: Present Issues and Future ChallengesSimran K. Johal, Rohit Batra, and Emilio FerrerChapter 9. Using the Internet to Collect DataUlf-Dietrich ReipsPart IV. Building and Testing ModelsChapter 2 . Statistical Mediation AnalysisDavid P. MacKinnon, Jeewon Cheong, Angela G. Pirlott, and Heather L. SmythChapter 2 . Structural Equation Modeling with Latent VariablesRick H. Hoyle and Nisha C. GottfredsonChapter 22. Mathematical PsychologyParker Smith, Yanjun Liu, James T. Townsend, and Trisha Van ZandtChapter 23. Computational ModelingAdele DiederichChapter 24. Fundamentals of Bootstrapping and Monte Carlo MethodsWilliam Howard Beasley, Patrick O'Keefe, and Joseph Lee RodgersChapter 25. Designing Simulation StudiesXitao FanChapter 2 . Bayesian Modeling for Psychologists: An Applied ApproachFred M. Feinberg and Richard GonzalezPart V. Designs Involving Experimental ManipulationsSection . Designs With Different Participant Assignment MechanismsChapter 27. Randomized Designs in Psychological ResearchLarry Christensen, Lisa A. Turner, and R. Burke JohnsonChapter 28. Nonequivalent Comparison Group DesignsHenry May and Zachary K. CollierChapter 29. Regression Discontinuity DesignsCharles S. Reichardt and Gary T. HenrySection 2. Experimental Manipulations in Applied SettingsChapter 3 . Treatment Validity for Intervention StudiesDianne L. Chambless and Steven D. HollonChapter 3 . Translational ResearchMichael T. Bardo, Christopher Cappelli, and Mary Ann PentzChapter 32. Program Evaluation: Outcomes and Costs of Putting Psychology to WorkBrian T. YatesPart VI. Quantitative Research Designs Involving Single Participants or UnitsChapter 33. Single-Case Experimental DesignJohn M. Ferron, Megan Kirby, and Lodi LipienChapter 34. Time Series DesignsBradley J. Bartos, Richard McCleary, and David McDowallPart VII. Designs in Neuropsychology and Biological PsychologySection . NeuropsychologyChapter 35. Case Studies in NeuropsychologyRandi C. Martin, Simon Fischer-Baum, and Corinne M. PettigrewChapter 3 . Group Studies in Experimental NeuropsychologyAvinash R Vaidya, Maia Pujara, and Lesley K. FellowsSection 2. Genetic Methods in PsychologyChapter 37. Genetic Methods in PsychologyTerrell A. Hicks, Daniel Bustamante, Karestan C. Koenen, Nicole R. Nugent, and Ananda B. AmstadterChapter 38. Human Genetic EpidemiologyFloris Huider, Lannie Ligthart, Yuri Milaneschi, Brenda W. J. H. Penninx, and Dorret I. BoomsmaVolume 3. Data Analysis and Research PublicationEditorial BoardContributorsPart I. Quantitative Data AnalysisSection . Preparing Data for AnalysisChapter . Methods for Dealing With Bad Data and Inadequate Models: Distributions, Linear Models, and BeyondRand R. Wilcox and Guillaume A. RousseletChapter 2. Maximum Likelihood and Multiple Imputation Missing Data Handling: How They Work, and How to Make Them Work in PracticeTimothy Hayes and Craig K. EndersChapter 3. Exploratory Data AnalysisPaul F. Velleman and David C. HoaglinSection 2. Describing DataChapter 4. Graphic Displays of DataLeland WilkinsonChapter 5. Estimating and Visualizing Interactions in Moderated Multiple RegressionConnor J. McCabe and Kevin M. KingChapter . Effect Size EstimationMichael BorensteinChapter 7. Measures of Clinically Significant ChangeRussell J. Bailey, Benjamin M. Ogles, and Michael J. LambertSection 3. Methods With Single OutcomesChapter 8. Analysis of Variance and the General Linear ModelJames Jaccard and Ai BoChapter 9. Generalized Linear ModelsDavid RindskopfChapter . Multilevel Modeling for PsychologistsJohn B. NezlekSection 4. Methods With Outcomes Measured Over TimeChapter . Longitudinal Data AnalysisAndrew K. LittlefieldChapter 2. Event History AnalysisFetene B. Tekle and Jeroen K. VermuntChapter 3. Latent State-Trait ModelsRolf Steyer, Christian Geiser, and Christiane Lo amp szlig nitzerChapter 4. Latent Variable Modeling of Continuous GrowthDavid A. Cole, Jeffrey A. Ciesla, and Qimin LiuChapter 5. Dynamical Systems and Differential Equation Models of ChangeSteven M. Boker and Robert G. MoulderChapter . A Multivariate Growth Curve Model for Three-Level DataPatrick J. Curran, Chris L. Strauss, Ethan M. McCormick, and James S. McGinleySection 5. Multivariate MethodsChapter 7. Exploratory Factor Analysis and Confirmatory Factor AnalysisKeith F. Widaman and Jonathan Lee HelmChapter 8. Latent Class and Latent Profile ModelsBrian P. Flaherty, Liying Wang, and Cara J. KiffChapter 9. Decision Trees and Ensemble Methods in the Behavioral SciencesKevin J. Grimm, Ross Jacobucci, and John J. McArdleSection . Dyadic and Social Network DataChapter 2 . Using the Social Relations Model to Understand Interpersonal Perception and BehaviorP. Niels Christensen, Deborah A. Kashy, and Katelin E. LeahyChapter 2 . Dyadic Data AnalysisRichard Gonzalez and Dale GriffinSection 7. Using Data Collected by OthersChapter 22. The Data of Others: New and Old Faces of Archival ResearchSophie Pychlau and David T. WagnerChapter 23. Social Network Analysis in Psychology: Recent Breakthroughs in Methods and TheoriesWei Wang, Tobias Stark, James D. Westaby, Adam K. Parr, and Daniel A. NewmanChapter 24. Meta-AnalysisJeffrey C. Valentine, Therese D. Pigott, and Joseph MorrisPart II. Publishing and the Publication ProcessChapter 25. Research Data Management and SharingKatherine G. Akers and John A. BorghiChapter 2 . Questionable Practices in Statistical Analysis Rex B. Kline Chapter 27. Ethical Issues in Manuscript Preparation and AuthorshipJennifer Crocker
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