Match each research design or component with the description of how it addresses (or fails to address) normal, ongoing fluctuations in a dependent variable.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Example of an Interrupted Time-Series Design: Student Absences
What is a primary advantage of the interrupted time-series design over a simple one-group pretest-posttest design?
A researcher measures student anxiety once before introducing a new study-skills workshop and once after. She observes a decrease in anxiety and concludes the workshop was effective. However, if anxiety levels naturally rise and fall from week to week, her conclusion may be unwarranted because a single pre- and post-measurement cannot distinguish a genuine treatment effect from ordinary fluctuations in the outcome variable.
A clinical psychologist wants to evaluate whether a new mindfulness technique reduces insomnia. Rather than measuring a patient's sleep quality just once before the therapy and once after, she tracks the patient's sleep quality every night for two weeks prior to introducing the technique and two weeks after. By doing this, she can account for normal daily sleep fluctuations by establishing a baseline ______, which prevents her from falsely attributing typical night-to-night variations to the new therapy.
A clinical psychologist is evaluating a new mindfulness-based intervention for reducing patient anxiety. Match each methodological component to the analytical role it plays in distinguishing a genuine treatment effect from normal, ongoing fluctuations in anxiety levels.
A researcher is investigating whether a new workplace wellness initiative actually reduces employee stress levels or if a recorded decrease is simply part of a natural seasonal cycle. To evaluate the initiative's impact while effectively ruling out normal fluctuations as the cause, arrange the following steps of an interrupted time-series design in the correct logical sequence.
A school psychologist is tasked with generating a research protocol to evaluate if a new 'Mindful Minutes' exercise reduces student stress, which is known to fluctuate significantly based on the day of the week and upcoming exams. Which of the following measurement frameworks should the psychologist synthesize to ensure the design effectively accounts for these natural fluctuations and establishes a reliable baseline trend before the exercise is introduced?
A single pretest and posttest measurement is sufficient for researchers to establish a baseline trend and rule out normal, ongoing fluctuations in a dependent variable.
Match each research design or component with the description of how it addresses (or fails to address) normal, ongoing fluctuations in a dependent variable.
A health researcher wants to determine whether a hospital's new hand-hygiene protocol genuinely reduced patient infection rates, or whether an observed drop simply reflects the unit's normal weekly fluctuation. She records infection counts for 12 consecutive weeks before the protocol and 12 weeks after. By examining the full set of pre-intervention data points together, she establishes a _____ that she can then use to judge whether the change observed at the moment the protocol was introduced exceeds what would be expected from routine variation alone.
A university counseling director collected 14 weekly measurements of students' self-reported anxiety—7 weeks before a new stress-management workshop and 7 weeks after—using an interrupted time-series design. She must now evaluate whether the post-workshop drop in anxiety is a genuine treatment effect or merely normal semester variation. Rank the following analytical steps in the order that best supports a valid, evidence-based conclusion.
Explain the primary advantage of utilizing an interrupted time-series design over a simple one-group pretest-posttest design when evaluating a psychological intervention. In your response, specifically address the role of measurement frequency and how it affects a researcher's ability to draw conclusions about the intervention's effectiveness.
Based on the provided context, identify the major limitation of the psychologist's research design in terms of measurement frequency. Then, explain how transitioning to an interrupted time-series design would address this limitation and why it would lead to a more valid conclusion.
A researcher is studying the impact of a new workplace ergonomics program on weekly employee back pain ratings, which naturally fluctuate. Instead of using a simple pretest-posttest design, how should the researcher structure their measurement schedule using an interrupted time-series design to ensure they do not falsely attribute normal variation to the program?