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    Good research designs lead to a high internal validity. A study is internally valid when you really can assume the independent variable effects the dependent variable. Often you cannot. All slides to the entire series can be downloaded for free here: https://armintrost.de/en/professor/digital/social-research-methods/

    Recent Episodes from Social Research Methods

    #23 Academic Writing

    #23 Academic Writing
    Writing an academic report or article mainly follows a specific structure, format and style since academic papers differ from all other media most people are familiar with (e.g. news-paper article). All slides to the entire series can be downloaded for free here: https://armintrost.de/en/professor/digital/social-research-methods/

    #20 Factor Analysis

    #20 Factor Analysis
    Factor analysis reduces complexity of data by extracting a few factors. It delivers underlying coordinates in an otherwise complicated set of variables. We use factor analysis for instance to understand the basic independent dimensions of personality. All slides to the entire series can be downloaded for free here: https://armintrost.de/en/professor/digital/social-research-methods/

    #19 Variance Analysis

    #19 Variance Analysis
    We use variance analysis (ANOVA) to compare variance within and between groups. It is a method to test hypothesis that is in particular suitable for experimental designs. Once there are more than one independent variables we name this MANOVA. All slides to the entire series can be downloaded for free here: https://armintrost.de/en/professor/digital/social-research-methods/

    #18 Hypothesis Testing

    #18 Hypothesis Testing
    In social science we estimate the probability of the null hypothesis being wrong even though it might be true. Should we reject or accept the null hypothesis over the alternative hypothesis? This is an essential idea in inferential statistics. All slides to the entire series can be downloaded for free here: https://armintrost.de/en/professor/digital/social-research-methods/

    #16 Estimating Mean and Standard Deviation of Population

    #16 Estimating Mean and Standard Deviation of Population
    While we know the mean and standard deviation of our sample we don’t know the real ones. That’s why we estimate. There is a reason, why using n-1 instead of N when estimating standard deviation of the population based on a sample. All slides to the entire series can be downloaded for free here: https://armintrost.de/en/professor/digital/social-research-methods/