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Brooks, Joseph L. – Psychological Methods, 2012
Reactions of neural, psychological, and social systems are rarely, if ever, independent of previous inputs and states. The potential for serial order carryover effects from one condition to the next in a sequence of experimental trials makes counterbalancing of condition order an essential part of experimental design. Here, a method is proposed…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Research Design, Graphs, Methods
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Tucker-Drob, Elliot M. – Psychological Methods, 2011
Experiments allow researchers to randomly vary the key manipulation, the instruments of measurement, and the sequences of the measurements and manipulations across participants. To date, however, the advantages of randomized experiments to manipulate both the aspects of interest and the aspects that threaten internal validity have been primarily…
Descriptors: Experiments, Research Design, Inferences, Individual Differences
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Cole, David A.; Ciesla, Jeffrey A.; Steiger, James H. – Psychological Methods, 2007
In practice, the inclusion of correlated residuals in latent-variable models is often regarded as a statistical sleight of hand, if not an outright form of cheating. Consequently, researchers have tended to allow only as many correlated residuals in their models as are needed to obtain a good fit to the data. The current article demonstrates that…
Descriptors: Research Design, Multitrait Multimethod Techniques, Measurement Techniques, Correlation
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Reichardt, Charles S. – Psychological Methods, 2006
An effect is a function of a cause as well as of 4 other factors: recipient, setting, time, and outcome variable. The principle of parallelism states that if a design option exists for any 1 of these 4 factors, a parallel option exists for each of the others. For example, effects are often estimated by drawing a comparison across recipients who…
Descriptors: Research Design, Outcomes of Treatment, Effect Size, Medical Services
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Graham, John W.; Taylor, Bonnie J.; Olchowski, Allison E.; Cumsille, Patricio E. – Psychological Methods, 2006
The authors describe 2 efficiency (planned missing data) designs for measurement: the 3-form design and the 2-method measurement design. The 3-form design, a kind of matrix sampling, allows researchers to leverage limited resources to collect data for 33% more survey questions than can be answered by any 1 respondent. Power tables for estimating…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Structural Equation Models, Psychological Studies, Data Collection