Learn Before
A student is critically evaluating whether the implicit egotism archival study — which used Social Security records and name-state migration patterns — can support a causal conclusion. Arrange the following evaluative steps in the order that best reflects a sound critical appraisal of the study's causal claims.
0
1
Tags
KPU
Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
Related
In a study on the tendency for people to gravitate toward things resembling their own names, researchers examined existing Social Security records and found that women named Virginia, Georgia, Louise, and Florence were disproportionately likely to have moved to states with similar-sounding names (Virginia, Georgia, Louisiana, and Florida).
In a study investigating the tendency for people to prefer things that resemble themselves, researchers analyzed migration data to see if women moved to states with names similar to their own. Match each element of this study to its corresponding role in the archival research process.
A researcher wants to test the hypothesis that people are disproportionately drawn to careers that resemble their own names (e.g., people named 'Dennis' or 'Denise' becoming 'dentists'). To apply the archival research methodology used in the study of Social Security records and state names (where people named 'Virginia' were found to be more likely to move to the state of 'Virginia'), which of the following actions should the researcher take?
Researchers using archival data to investigate why people might subconsciously gravitate toward life choices that resemble their own names must follow a systematic analytical logic. Arrange the steps of this process in the correct order, from the initial selection of the data source to the final interpretation of the findings.
Suppose you are tasked with designing a novel archival research study to determine if implicit egotism influences the names people give to their personal property, such as boats. To mirror the methodology used in the Social Security migration study (where researchers counted name-state similarities in existing databases), which of the following integrated research protocols should you propose?
To evaluate why archival research was chosen for the implicit egotism study, a researcher would point to the fact that the measurement of migration patterns is _____, as it relies on counting frequencies in existing databases rather than creating complex new data.
To study implicit egotism in name-state migration patterns, researchers analyzed existing _____ records to determine if women with names like Virginia or Georgia were disproportionately likely to move to states with similar-sounding names.
A researcher wants to extend the implicit egotism name-state migration finding to men. She accesses existing U.S. Census records and counts how many men named 'Louis' currently reside in Louisiana compared to states with dissimilar names, then compares that proportion to men with other names. This approach correctly applies the same archival research method used in the original implicit egotism study.
The implicit egotism archival study has several distinct methodological components. Match each component to the specific role it plays in the study's design and logic.
A student is critically evaluating whether the implicit egotism archival study — which used Social Security records and name-state migration patterns — can support a causal conclusion. Arrange the following evaluative steps in the order that best reflects a sound critical appraisal of the study's causal claims.
In the study of implicit egotism discussed in the text, how did researchers measure the tendency of individuals to prefer places similar to themselves? In your response, identify the specific pre-existing database they analyzed, the direct measurement activity they performed, and the specific name-state pairings that illustrated their findings.
Explain why the second researcher's archival proposal is a more straightforward measurement approach than the prospective survey. In your explanation, describe the measurement process in archival research and clarify what specific pattern in the archival data would support the hypothesis of implicit egotism based on the provided text.
Design a new research study that applies the archival methodology of the implicit egotism study to see if a similar name-matching preference occurs with cities instead of states. Specify the database you would use, what you would count, and what specific finding would support the concept of implicit egotism.