Front cover image for The handbook of research methods in social psychology

The handbook of research methods in social psychology

This volume, first published in 2000, provides an overview of research methods in contemporary social psychology. Coverage includes conceptual issues in research design, methods of research, and statistical approaches. Because the range of research methods available for social psychology has expanded extensively in the past decade, both traditional and innovative methods are presented.
Print Book, English, 2000
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000
576 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
9780521551281, 9780521559034, 0521551285, 0521559030
43457666
1. Introduction Harry T. Reis and Charles M. Judd; Part I. Design and Inference Considerations: 2. Validity issues and research design Marilynn B. Brewer; 3. Research design Eliot R. Smith; 4. Causal inference and generalization in field settings: experimental and quasi-experimental designs Stephen G. West, Jeremy C. Biesanz and Steven C. Pitts; 5. Computer simulation methods for social psychology Reid Hastie and Gary Stasser; Part II. Procedural Possibilities: 6. Psychophysiological methods James Blascovich; 7. Behavioral observation and coding Roger Bakeman; 8. Methods of small group research Norbert L. Kerr, Joel Aronoff and Lawrence A. Messe; 9. Event-sampling and other methods for studying daily experience Harry T. Reis and Shelly L. Gable; 10. Survey research Penny S. Visser, Jon A. Krosnick and Paul J. Lavrikas; 11. Studying the mind in the middle John A. Bargh and Tanya L. Chartrand; 12. Coding semi-structures interviews in social psychological research Kim Bartholomew, Antonia J. Z. Henderson and James E. Marcia; 13. Content analysis and narrative analysis Charles P. Smith; Part III. Data Analytic Strategies: 14. Measurement: reliability, construct validation, and scale construction Oliver P. John and Victoria Benet-Martinez; 15. Everyday data analysis in social psychology: comparisons of linear models Charles M. Judd; 16. Nasty data: unruly, ill-mannered observations can ruin your analysis Gary H. McClelland; 17. Analysis and design for nonexperimental data: addressing causal and noncausal hypotheses Duane T. Wegener and Leandre R. Fabrigar; 18. The analysis of data from dyads and groups Deborah A. Kashy and David A. Kenny; 19. Linda M. Collins and Aline G. Sayer; 20. Quantitative synthesis of social psychological research Blair T. Johnson and Alice H. Eagly.