Skullet Ratman
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- What tradition is communication research based on?
- A. Ancient Greek rhetoric B. Sociology C. Social science, including work by Wilbur Schramm and Harold Laswell
- The research process begins with...
- defining problems and goals
- problem statements include...
- goals
- In the Kadlec Medical Center problem statement example, what was the goal?
- To use results of the study for promotion and advertising to increase bed use
- What is variance?
- How much variability there is in a variable
- Which of the following is a descriptive research question?
- What is the image of my company?
- Which of the following is a ratio level of measurement?
- Number of technologies owned
- Once you have operationalized your variables you can create tables.
- This is true, but you just won’t know what numbers go into the tables
- What is a dependent variable?
- The effect
- Which of the following is more precise?
- 0 to 100%
- Why is it important to expose myths like “people only use 10% of their brains�
- So legislators and consumers don’t waste money on techniques that allegedly increase brain use
- In the Camp Fire problem statement example, what was the goal?
- To identify targets and guide emphasis of the promotional campaigns
- What is a limitation of traditional ways of knowing?
- They don’t have a method to falsify their conclusions
- In communication industry research, we care most about⬦
- variables
- What is the best way to test a hypothesis?
- With an experiment
- What is an independent variable?
- A variable that causes another variable to change
- Why is measurement important?
- It determines what analyses you can do, such as whether or not you can compute averages
- What is wrong with: Ask, “How many hours of TV did you watch yesterday?†Put observations into categories: 0-1; 1-5; 5 or more.
- not mutually exclusive
- As the values of one variable increase while the values of another variable decrease, you have a
- negative relation
- As the values of one variable increase while the values of another variable stay the same, you have a
- No relation
- To show cause and effect you need to ⬦
- Eliminate other causes
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average was used as an example of⬦
- Not all hypotheses are testable, random daily fluctuations defy explanation
- The Post-test Control Group experiment was used for...
- The newspaper layout experiment
- Quasi-experiment is ⬦
- Not a true experiment
- Don Dillman’s principles for doing electronic surveys include
- Don’t expect respondents to remember instructions listed at the beginning
- What’s wrong with the following variable: Ask people “What do you expect to spend on food†and categorize their answers as $0-$20; $21-$30; $31-$40; over $40.
- No time parameter
- The Luigi’s Restaurant customer survey card shown in class is an example of…
- Qualitative research
- The post test only control group experiment⬦
- Has at least one stimulus group and one control, and uses only an observation after the stimulus
- In the hypothesis, “What percent of Queens county residents have cable modems?†what is the DV?
- there is no DV
- Using online polls is ⬦
- Is not representative
- “Males, 18-35 years old, will spend more money on music downloads in the next 30 days than females.†is an example of…
- a hypothesis
- When you define your problem you should⬦
- write it down
- Joey mailed a questionnaire to a random sample of 300 WSU students in January 2005. What is the design?
- Cross-sectional survey
- If Joey said, “There is always a best operationalization.†he would be…
- wrong
- Why is there “replication�
- Because science is not 100% sure, so studies are replicated to see if there are similar results
- Science owes the development of the concept “zero†to...
- parts of the world outside Western Europe
- The bicycle example (to turn a bicycle to the left you should try to turn the handlebars to the right) demonstrated ⬦
- The need to test out what is common sense or common knowledge
- Humans use how much of their brains?
- Over 50%
- The story of the American Enterprise Institute paying scientists for rebutting the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change was to illustrate...
- bad use of science, you shouldn’t pick only science reports that support your biases
- In the RQ, “How many CD’s are purchased in a month by males, 12-18 years old?†what is the DV?
- There is no DV
- Immediately after you write your problem statement you should⬦
- Try to find existing information about your problem from archives or other sources
- Which is true about Operationalizations?
- There is no best operationalization.
- Which design is best for testing cause and effect?
- Experiment
- Immediately after you operationalize you can⬦
- Set up your tables, but without numbers in them
- Conducting a pre-test survey, then putting your campaign into the field, then conducting a post-test survey is an example of⬦
- a quasi-experiment
- What made the REI mail-questionnaire cover letter good?
- There was an incentive (entry into a contest to win a $100 certificate)
- Convenience studies⬦
- are not representative
- The Solomon Four Group⬦
- Has a “pre-test†observation for half the groups, but no “pre-test†observation for the other half
- Which are good ways to evaluate the success of advertising on web pages?
- Panel surveys done by companies like Media Matrix
- What’s the best way to know if your questionnaire is good?
- pre-test it
- One-shot surveys are usually less complicated and less expensive than experiments. They usually cost about⬦
- over 5000 dollars
- Which of the following is a “rule of thumb†for constructing questionnaires?
- Follow your operationalization
- Open-ended questions are used...
- sparingly in quantitative studies because they take up a lot of time
- Why is knowing a lot about variables important?
- If people didn’t change there would be no need for research, campaigns, etc.
- Multiple response questionnaire items are good for...
- Scales, like number of political activities participated in
- Which of the following are “rules of thumb†for questionnaires?
- Do not use leading questions
- Collecting data via telephone is...
- A data gathering technique
- For information about users of yahoo.com, which is best?
- A survey of people with internet access
- Making sure that people give similar answers this morning as tonight (such as giving the same number for age) is...
- Reliability
- For an initial study, just describing a population, the best survey is⬦
- Cross-sectional
- Dillman has developed guidelines for doing...
- Mail and electronic studies
- As income goes up the likelihood of buying a BMW goes up is..
- A positive relation
- In the “Research Process†lecture joey showed that a basic cross-sectional survey can cost...
- Over $10,000
- Why is defining the problem the first step in research?
- If you don’t know what you need and how you will use the information from a study you will waste time and money
- The value of online sources such as the Pew Center is ..
- You can look at their questionnaires for examples of how to ask questions
- Which is an advantage of telephone over mail?
- Can be completed in a shorter time
- A target market or a target population is a⬦
- constant
- In an introduction to a telephone survey you should⬦
- say that you're not asking for donations
- What does the example of how to turn a bicycle show?
- We may make correct decisions (to turn right you need to try to turn the handlebars left), but we may not be conscious it
- Why do we care so much about variables?
- Knowing how things change allows us to determine what causes change and our impact on that change
- which of the following is a variable
- Men, 18-35 years old vs. women, 36+
- Why does the book say there will be a lot of cooperation between professionals and academics?
- Professional organizations try to cooperate with academics, such as the NAB’s “Grants for Research in Broadcastingâ€
- Problem statements⬦
- Should be written
- If people do not change, what is their variance?
- Zero
- Which step in the research process precedes the other?
- Developing research questions precedes developing scales
- What is measurement?
- How you plan to code observations you make for a variable
- What is the level of measurement of: Ask, “How many hours of TV did you watch yesterday?†Put observations into categories: 0-1; 2-5; over 5.
- Ordinal
- What is the usefulness of experiments?
- they test cause and effect
- Use the following hypothesis for Q 11 and Q 12: As amount of attention to presidential campaign advertising increases the likelihood of voting in the presidential election also increases...What is the independent variable?
- Amount of attention to political advertising
- Use the following hypothesis for Q 11 and Q 12: As amount of attention to presidential campaign advertising increases the likelihood of voting in the presidential election also increases...What is the dependent variable?
- liklihood of voting
- What is wrong with: Ask, “How often do you listen to radio?†Put observations into categories: never, rarely, frequently.
- The categories are not precise
- As the values of one variable increase while the values of another stay the same, you have a
- no relation
- Why do informal research?
- To reduce our narrow views of the world
- Which of the following can interfere with external validity?
- Selection bias
- Why use the Solomon Four-Group experiment?
- To control for sensitizing subjects with a pre-test
- Focus groups should be used for⬦
- Generating ideas
- As the values of one variable increase while the values of another variable randomly change, you have a
- No relation
- The Red Robin customer comment card is an example of⬦
- Informal research
- Which is an advantage of quantitative over qualitative designs?
- Can be used to evaluate campaigns
- Joey showed a mail questionnaire, “Household Research Survey, Consumer Product Survey of America,†with many consumer questions. What is true about the return envelope?
- It would be better to use brightly colored commemorative stamps
- “How much money do males, 18-35 years old, expect to spend on music downloads in the next 30 days?†is an example of…
- A descriptive research question
- The last step in the research process is⬦
- Replicate
- When you define your problem you should⬦
- ⬦write it down
- Joey mailed a questionnaire to a random sample of 300 WSU students in January 2005; he mailed another questionnaire to the same 300 students in March 2005. What is the design?
- Panel study
- What is the communication research tradition (the communication field’s lines of inquiry)?
- Studying Cable TV, internet and other technology adoption
- Content analysis includes⬦
- Survey of competitors’ advertising
- Which of the following is a research design?
- Trend study
- How does explained variance help you?
- If you have many “statistically significant†relations, it tells which relations are stronger
- How do levels of measurement relate to analysis?
- The level determines whether you can do percentages or averages
- Joey e-mailed a questionnaire to all WSU College of Communication students in September 2008. What is the research design?
- a census
- If Joey said, “All RQs can be answered scientifically.†he would be
- wrong
- “There is always one best operationalization†is… T or F?
- False
- The example used in class for testing an ad by first asking people to tell what they want in their shopping basket, then showing the ad, then asking people to tell what they want in their shopping basket again is an example of⬦
- quasi-experiment
- Are convenience studies representative?
- nope
- Focus groups ⬦
- Are complex, requiring planning of agendas, etc.
- The RQ: “Men are more likely to shop at outdoor stores than women are?†Relational or not?
- is relational
- Which is an advantage of mail over telephone?
- Higher contact rate
- Most applied research for communication industries uses which design?
- survey
- Why do you need to know the culture of the population you are studying?
- Culture may bias a study, such as overrepresenting females who are more likely to answer the phone in the U.S.
- What is the advantage of open-ended questions?
- C. You can get the “flavor†for a response to a closed-ended questionq
- What is an advantage of electronic data collection?
- time efficient
- What is similar about on-line polls, convenience studies and placing questionnaire
- All three can have problems with overrepresenting some people and underrepresenting others
- How can databases be helpful?
- You can sort by a variable, such as “number of employees supervised†and see if there are patterns in other variables
- A panel is ⬦
- a research design
- Which product is more dangerous for children (based on the index number of deaths caused by the product per 100,000 homes having the product)?
- pools
- What are problems with electronic data collection?
- Formatting problems
- Multiple response items⬦
- Are good for some indexes
- Can you create categories for verbatims?
- Yes, but have two or more coders, and do “intercoder reliabilityâ€
- the best way to see if your web page is effective is⬦
- Supplement online data (such as tracking with cookies) with a survey