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demand characteristics  Cues and other information used by participants to guide their behavior in a psychological study, often leading participants to do what they believe the observer (experimenter) expects them to do.
field experiment  Procedure in which one or more independent variables is manipulated by an observer in a natural setting to determine the effect on behavior.
interobserver reliability   Degree to which two independent observers are in agreement.
measurement scale  One of four levels of physical and psychological measurement: nominal (categorizing), ordinal (ranking), interval (specifying distance between stimuli), and ratio (having an absolute zero point).
narrative records  Record intended to provide a more or less faithful reproduction of behavior as it originally occurred.
naturalistic observation  Observation of behavior in a more or less natural setting without any attempt by the observer to intervene.
observer bias  Systematic errors in observation often resulting from the observer's expectancies regarding the outcome of a study (i.e., expectancy effects).
participant observation  Observation of behavior by someone who also has an active and significant role in the situation or context in which behavior is recorded.
reactivity  Influence that an observer has on the behavior under observation; behavior influenced by an observer may not be representative of behavior when an observer is not present.
situation sampling  Random or systematic selection of situations in which observations are made with the goal of representativeness across circumstances, locations, and conditions.
structured observation  Variety of observational methods using intervention in which the degree of control is often less than in field experiments; frequently used by clinical and developmental psychologists when making behavioral assessments.
time sampling  Selection of observation intervals either systematically or randomly with the goal of obtaining a representative sample of behavior.
unobtrusive (nonreactive) measures  Measures of behavior that eliminate the problem of reactivity, because observations are made in such a way that the presence of the observer is not detected by those being observed.







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