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Johnson, Matthew D. – American Psychologist, 2013
The author is gratified and encouraged that such an esteemed group of relationship scientists as Hawkins et al. (2013, this issue) want to continue the discussion of government-supported marriage and relationship education (MRE) programs for lower income couples by responding to his article (Johnson, May-June 2012). In their comment, they argued…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Federal Programs, Data, Marriage
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Arnett, Jeffrey J. – American Psychologist, 2008
This article proposes that psychological research published in APA journals focuses too narrowly on Americans, who comprise less than 5% of the world's population. The result is an understanding of psychology that is incomplete and does not adequately represent humanity. First, an analysis of articles published in six premier APA journals is…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Psychology, Cultural Context, American Studies
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Erceg-Hurn, David M.; Mirosevich, Vikki M. – American Psychologist, 2008
Classic parametric statistical significance tests, such as analysis of variance and least squares regression, are widely used by researchers in many disciplines, including psychology. For classic parametric tests to produce accurate results, the assumptions underlying them (e.g., normality and homoscedasticity) must be satisfied. These assumptions…
Descriptors: Statistical Significance, Least Squares Statistics, Effect Size, Statistical Studies
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Gorsuch, Richard L. – American Psychologist, 1984
A major problem of research into religion is whether religion is uni- or multi-dimensional; a model maintaining the advantages of both approaches is suggested with general religiousness as a broad construct (higher order factor) that is subdivided into a set of more specific factors. (CMG)
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Models, Questionnaires, Religion
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Wicherts, Jelte M.; Borsboom, Denny; Kats, Judith; Molenaar, Dylan – American Psychologist, 2006
The origin of the present comment lies in a failed attempt to obtain, through e-mailed requests, data reported in 141 empirical articles recently published by the American Psychological Association (APA). Our original aim was to reanalyze these data sets to assess the robustness of the research findings to outliers. We never got that far. In June…
Descriptors: Psychology, Psychological Studies, Ethics, Research Methodology
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Banuazizi, Ali; Movahedi, Siamak – American Psychologist, 1975
A critical overview is presented of the Stanford Prison Experiment, conducted by Zimbardo and his coinvestigators in which they attempted a structural analysis of the problems of imprisonment. Key assumptions are questioned, primarily on methodological grounds, which casts doubts on the plausibility of the experimenters' final causal inferences.…
Descriptors: Institutional Environment, Institutionalized Persons, Prisoners, Research Methodology
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Malpass, Roy S. – American Psychologist, 1977
Cross cultural psychology is considered as a methodological strategy, as a means of evaluating hypotheses of unicultural origins with evidence of more panhuman relevance, and as a means of developing new theoretical psychological phenomena. (Author)
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Psychology, Research Methodology, Research Needs
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Cooper, Joel – American Psychologist, 1976
Discusses the question of appropriate research methodologies for social psychology research, casting "involved participation" and role enactment as contrasting methodologies, with deception used in either case where necessary. Involved participation is considered to be more flexible and more suited for the testing of hypotheses whereas role…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Experimental Psychology, Experiments, Participation
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Baltes, Paul B.; Schaie, K. Warner – American Psychologist, 1976
This reply to Horn and Donaldson is previous critique of Schaie and Baltes' Research and writings on intelligence in adulthood and old age has two parts: the first discusses theoretical perspectives and the second makes observations on the empirical data base. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Age Groups, Developmental Psychology, Formal Criticism
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Forward, John; And Others – American Psychologist, 1976
A theoretical analysis and a review of the uses of role playing and deception methods indicates that role playing methods are based on a more comprehensive and inclusive conceptualization of human behavior than are deception methods, and that role playing assumptions are better able to account for the empirical findings in research on the behavior…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Learning Processes, Motivation, Psychological Studies
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Zuckerman, Marvin – American Psychologist, 1990
Discusses the difficulties of defining races and establishing statistical differences between such groups. Points out that studies of such aspects as temperament or basic personality traits show much more variation within groups than between groups. Investigators of such questions should be especially careful to use sound methodology and cautious…
Descriptors: Personality Measures, Race, Racial Bias, Racial Differences
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Wang, Vivian Ota; Sue, Stanley – American Psychologist, 2005
The difficulties of operationalizing race in research and practice for social, behavioral, and genetic researchers and practitioners are neither new nor related to recent genetic knowledge. For geneticists, the bases for understanding groups are clines, observed traits that gradually change in frequency between geographic regions without distinct…
Descriptors: Race, Scientists, Psychologists, Behavioral Sciences
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Epstein, Yakov M.; And Others – American Psychologist, 1973
Descriptors: Expectation, Experimental Psychology, Interpersonal Relationship, Laboratory Experiments
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Horn, John L.; Donaldson, Gary – American Psychologist, 1977
Concludes "that the one seemingly serious effort of Baltes and Schaie to contest the points of the Horn-Donaldson criticisms only brings us around to the same sad conclusion: that no matter how one looks at the Schaie data, it suggests that, on the average, there is age decline in many important abilities of intelligence." (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Age Differences, Cohort Analysis, Intelligence Differences
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Deitz, Samuel M. – American Psychologist, 1978
The main question explored in this article is whether behavior analysts are more interested in examining the variables of which socially important behaviors are a function, or in improving those behaviors. It is concluded that improvement is currently more important to researchers than analysis. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Behavioral Science Research, Research Methodology, Research Problems