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When planning a survey, a researcher must understand how sample size relates to both statistical confidence and practical constraints. Which statement best describes the trade-off a researcher faces when determining their survey's sample size?
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Confidence Interval
Sample Size and Population Size
When determining the optimal sample size for a survey, what are the two primary factors a researcher must generally balance?
A psychology researcher is planning a survey to study community health habits. Match each factor involved in determining their sample size with the specific role it plays in the planning process.
A social psychologist planning a survey on community resilience determines that 900 participants are required to achieve their desired level of statistical confidence. However, after realizing that the recruitment costs for 900 people would exceed their $500 research grant, they decide to survey only 400 people. In this scenario, the researcher has prioritized the study's budget over their initial goal for statistical confidence.
A psychology researcher is planning a survey on community mental health. Arrange the following steps in the logical sequence required to analyze and balance the determinants of their study's sample size.
When determining survey sample size, researchers frequently use a power analysis to balance the desired level of statistical confidence with the practical constraints of their study's budget.
When planning a survey, a researcher must understand how sample size relates to both statistical confidence and practical constraints. Which statement best describes the trade-off a researcher faces when determining their survey's sample size?
A psychology researcher finds that increasing their survey sample from to participants would cost an additional $1,500 but only provide a negligible increase in statistical confidence. By deciding that the marginal gain in precision does not justify the extra expense, the researcher has performed a/an _____ of the trade-off between the study's theoretical goals and its practical budget constraints.
A research methods instructor asks students to apply their understanding of survey sample size principles to concrete research situations. Match each scenario to the principle of survey sample size determination it best illustrates.
A researcher plans a large-scale health survey and determines through a power analysis that 1,000 participants are needed to reach her desired level of statistical confidence. After reviewing her grant award, she discovers she can only afford 400 participants. By breaking down what is preventing her from achieving her ideal sample size, a careful reviewer would conclude that the binding determinant in this scenario is the study's _____.
A research methods instructor asks students to critically evaluate whether a researcher made well-justified decisions when determining her survey sample size. Arrange the following evaluative steps in the order that would allow a reviewer to reach the most defensible judgment about the appropriateness of the researcher's chosen sample size.