JoVE Science Education
Experimental Psychology
A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content.  Sign in or start your free trial.
JoVE Science Education Experimental Psychology
Reliability in Psychology Experiments
  • 00:00Overview
  • 00:57Experimental Design
  • 02:09Running the Experiment
  • 02:58Representative Results
  • 03:47Applications
  • 04:44Summary

Confiabilidad en los experimentos de Psicología

English

Share

Overview

Fuente: Laboratorios de Gary Lewandowski, Dave Strohmetz y Natalie Ciarocco — Universidad de Monmouth

Para estudiar algo científico, un investigador debe determinar una manera de cuantificarlo. Sin embargo, los constructos psicológicos pueden ser difícil medir y cuantificar. Este video examina la confiabilidad en el contexto de análisis de contenido.

Un estudio reciente en la revista Pediatrics informó que 4 años de edad que vieron una caricatura rápida tenían peor rendimiento en tareas cognitivas, como las siguientes reglas en un juego, escuchar a la dirección de un adulto y demorar la gratificación, en comparación con otros niños que vieron una caricatura al ritmo más lenta. 1 además del ritmo de los dibujos animados, el contenido de los dibujos animados también puede tener efectos nocivos en sus jóvenes espectadores.

Este vídeo utiliza un simple diseño de dos grupos, para ejemplificar el tema de la fiabilidad, en el examen de la cuestión de si la historieta SpongeBob SquarePants tiene contenido más inapropiado que hace los dibujos animados de Caillou.

Procedure

1. definir las variables clave. Crear una definición operativa (es decir, una descripción clara de exactamente lo que un investigador significa un concepto) de contenido inapropiado. Consulte las definiciones creadas por la organización pautas parentales de TV y aprobado por la Comisión Federal de comunicaciones. Contenido inapropiado es cualquier crudo o grosero comportamiento (p. ej., humor de inodoro), representaciones de la agresión verbal o física (por ejem…

Results

The results indicate that the raters had a high level of agreement or consistency in their ratings within each cartoon episode, which indicates high inter-rater reliability (Figure 1). There is also reliability or consistency in SpongeBob SquarePants episodes having more inappropriate content than Caillou. The results also revealed individual biases amongst raters. For example, Rater 3 reported more inappropriate content in SpongeBob than the other 2 raters, and Rater 1 reported less in Caillou than other raters.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Instances of inappropriate content by rater and cartoon for episodes 1 (top) and 2 (bottom).

Applications and Summary

Researchers have increasingly turned their attention toward analyzing television’s content, especially as it relates to children. As discussed prior to this current experiment, a recent study in the journal Pediatrics correlated the fast pace of the SpongeBob SquarePants cartoon to relatively poor cognitive abilities in the children who watch it.

Since the results of our experiment appear reliable, future research could examine whether the relative amount of inappropriate content in SpongeBob is also (or alternatively) responsible for children’s lower cognitive performance after watching.

One of the most important applications of reliability is in the use of survey instruments. Researchers must be sure that participants will consistently answer each of the items in a particular scale. That is, in a 5-item measure of life satisfaction, participants should answer items 1 and 2 in a somewhat similar fashion to how they answer questions 3, 4, and 5.  In addition, researchers want to make sure that their measurements in an experiment are consistent over time. So if a researcher is using pupil dilation to indicate interest in a stimulus, the researcher must be sure that pupil dilation is a consistent indicator of interest.

References

  1. Lillard, A. S., & Peterson, J. The Immediate Impact of Different Types of Television on Young Children's Executive Function. Pediatrics. 128(4):644-9. doi: 10.1542/peds.2010-1919 (2011).

Transcript

Scientific research uses precise methods to collect data, yet variability in obtaining measurements often exists.

Reliability can be assessed for any experimental measurement, and today, we’ll have a look at measurements of inappropriate behaviors in cartoons.

When viewers agree on the amount of inappropriate material within the same show—across multiple episodes—their judgments are considered highly reliable. In this case, assessments can extend across different shows because of the consistency between observers, which is referred to as inter-rater reliability.

This video demonstrates how to design and perform, as well as how to analyze and interpret, an experiment examining whether one cartoon has more inappropriate content than another.

To examine reliability and inter-rater reliability, a within-subjects design is used in this experiment. Participants are asked to watch two episodes of two different cartoons—SpongeBob SquarePants and Caillou.

Within this context of cartoon watching, the dependent variable is the number of inappropriate behaviors participants observe. These include: any crude and rude behaviors, bad language, verbal and physical aggression, and references to drugs and sexual content.

If reliability exists in the scoring of inappropriate content of a specific cartoon, participants will consistently rate that cartoon across different episodes.

Moreover, if multiple participants are in agreement with the number of inappropriate instances they count, inter-rater reliability exists.

Thus, establishing inter-rater reliability allows researchers to use the same participants to more powerfully compare data between multiple conditions.

To conduct the study, prepare four clips: two different episodes from two different cartoons, SpongeBob SquarePants and Caillou.

To allow participants to systematically identify instances of inappropriate behavior, create a coding sheet with categories, concrete examples, and space to count each occurrence.

With the participant sitting in front of the screen, hand them four coding sheets. Instruct the participant to separately watch two episodes of SpongeBob SquarePants.

As the participant watches each episode, instruct them to identify every occurrence of inappropriate behavior.

Using the same coding scheme, instruct the participant to watch and rate two episodes of Caillou.

To analyze the reliability of participants’ ratings of cartoon content, compare the coding sheets between each participant across the different episodes of cartoons. Sum all of the responses on a master sheet.

Graph the total number of inappropriate behaviors for each rater across episodes and cartoons.

Note that high reliability was observed in the scoring of the two different cartoons, as SpongeBob is consistently scored higher than Caillou.

However, stronger inter-rater reliability was found in the scoring of inappropriate content in Caillou compared to SpongeBob. Reduced inter-rater reliability was more obvious in the scoring of Episode 2 of SpongeBob.

Now that you are familiar with reliability in the context of content analysis, you can apply this approach to other areas of research. 

Many psychological experiments gather information by utilizing cognitive assessments and surveys, in which reliability between each of the items must be consistent between participants.

Reliability in neurophysiological measures, such as EEG or eye tracking, is essential to conducting repeatable experiments. This reliability allows researchers to make associations between brain function and disease states across multiple subjects.

Additionally, researchers must ensure certain measurements in an experiment are consistent over time. For example, weight measurements are reliably taken to compare data before and after exercise routines.

You’ve just watched JoVE’s introduction to determining reliability in psychological experiments. Now you should have a good understanding of how to quantify a psychological construct such as inappropriate behavior, design an experiment, and finally how to evaluate reliability from the results.

Thanks for watching! 

Tags

Cite This
JoVE Science Education Database. JoVE Science Education. Reliability in Psychology Experiments. JoVE, Cambridge, MA, (2023).