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Measurement Issues General steps –Determine concept –Decide best way to measure –What indicators are available –Select intermediate, alternate or indirect measures
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Measurement Issues General steps –Consider limitations of measures selected –Collect or secure info/data –Summarize findings in writing
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What is the relation between concepts, variables, instruments & measures?
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Concepts Program is based on conceptual basis of why people behave the way they do
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Why do you think people behave the way they do? Think of food and nutrition issues
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Variables A theory has variables Variables define concepts Theory states how the variables interact or are related
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Variables Variables of the theory are what you measure Variables are the verbal or written abstractions of the ideas that exist in the mind
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Why should an intervention be based on a theory?
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Why use theory? Know what you are to address in the intervention Makes evaluation easier Know what to measure to evaluate
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Figure 6.1 A simple social learning theory model for reducing salt in the diet Comes next
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Fig. 6.1 Social learning theory
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Need measurements and instruments to assess changes in the variables of interest
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Instruments Something that produces a measure of an object Series of questions to measure the variable, concept Includes instructions
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Measures The numbers that come from the person answering questions on the instrument
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Figure 6.2 Relation among models, variables, measures, and an instrument Comes next
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Fig. 6.2
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Based on why you think people behave the way the do, list possible variables to consider to measure this variable. What might be variables of the social learning theory?
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What about variables that would verify if a change has or has not taken place?
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Figure 6.1 A simple social learning theory model for reducing salt in the diet Comes next See how the program links with the theory & what measure
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Fig. 6.1 Social learning theory
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Reliability The extent to which an instrument will produce the same result (measure or score) if applied two different or more times.
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Reliability X = T + E X is measure T is true value E is random error
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Reliability Measurement error reduces the ability to have reliable and valid results.
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Reliability Random error is all chance factors that confound the measurement. Always present Effects reliability but doesn’t bias results
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Reliability Figure 6.5 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test with random error A is true score a is measure
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Fig. 6.5 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test and random error
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Distribution Can have the same mean with two different distributions Figure 6.6 next
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Fig. 6.6 Two distributions of scores around the true mean
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Which distribution has less variability? Which distribution has less random error?
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Sources of Random Error Day-to-day variability Confusing instructions Unclear instrument Sloppy data collector
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Sources of Random Error Distracting environment Respondents Data-management error
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What can you do to reduce random error and increase reliability?
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Variability & the Subject What you want to measure will vary from day to day and within the person
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Variability & the Subject Intraindividual variability –variability among the true scores within a person over time
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Figure 6.7 True activity scores (A, B, C) for 3 days with three measures (a, b, c) per day Comes next
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Fig. 6.7 True activity (A, B, C) for 3 days with three measures (a, b, c) per day
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Variability & the Subject Interindividual variability –variability between each person in the sample
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Figure 6.8 Interindividual (A, X) and intraindividual (A1, A2, A3) variability for two people (A, X) in level of physical activity Comes next
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Fig. 6.8 Interindividual (A, X) and intraindividual (A1, A2, A3) variability for two people (A, X) in level of physical activity
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Assessing Reliability Need to know the reliability of your instruments Reliability coefficient of 1 is highest, no error Reliability coefficient of 0 is lowest, all error
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Factors of Reliability Type of instrument –observer –self-report Times instrument applied –same time –different time
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Figure 6.9 Types of reliability Comes next
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Fig. 6.9 Types of reliability
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Assessing Reliability Interobserver reliability –have 2 different observers rate same action at same time –reproducibility
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Assessing Reliability Intraobserver reliability –1 observer assesses same person at two different times –video tape the action & practice
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Assessing Reliability Repeat method –self-report or survey –repeat the same item/question at 2 points in survey
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Assessing Reliability Internal consistency –average inter-item correlation among items in an instrument that are cognitively related
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Assessing Reliability Internal consistency –Cronbach’s alpha –0.70 & above a good score
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Assessing Reliability Test-retest reliability (internal consistency method) –same survey/test at 2 different times to same person
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Validity Degree to which an instrument measures what the evaluator wants it to measure
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Bias Systematic error that produces a systematic difference between an obtained score and the true score Bias threatens validity
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Bias Figure 6.10 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test with systematic error Comes next
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Fig. 6.10 Distribution of scores of multiple applications of a test with systematic error
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What will basis do to your ability to make conclusions about your subjects?
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Figure 6.11 Effect of bias on conclusions Comes next
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Fig. 6.11 Effect of bias on conclusions
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Types of Validity Face Content Criterion
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Face Validity Describes the extent to which an instrument appears to measure what it is suppose to measure How many veg did you eat yesterday?
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Content Validity Extent to which an instrument is expected to cover several domains of the content Consult a group of experts
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Criterion Validity How accurate is a less costly way to measure the variable compared to the valid and more expensive instrument
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What can lower validity? Guinea pig effect –awareness of being tested Role selection –awareness of being measured may make people feel they have to play a role
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What can lower validity? Measurement as a change agent –act of measurement could change future behavior
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What can lower validity? Response sets –respond in a predictable way that has nothing to do with the questions
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What can lower validity? Interviewer effects –characteristics of the interviewer affects the receptivity and answers of the respondent
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What can lower validity? Population restrictions –if people can’t use the method of data collection, can’t generalize to others
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End of reliability and validity Questions Look at CNEP Survey
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