Examples of observer bias in the following topics:
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- Participant observation involves the researcher joining a sample of individuals without interfering with that group's normal activities in order to document their routine behavior or observe them in a natural context.
- Often researchers in observational studies will try to blend in seamlessly with the sample group to avoid compromising the results of their observations.
- These observations also capture behavior that is more natural than behavior occurring in the artificial setting of a lab and that is relatively free of some of the bias seen in survey responses.
- There are also ethical concerns related to observing individuals without their consent.
- Without the use of multiple researchers, the chances of observer bias increase; because behavior is perceived so subjectively, it is possible that two observers will notice different things or draw different conclusions from the same behavior.
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- Attribution theory, also called actor-observer bias, focuses on the attribution or causes of an action.
- The Egocentric bias causes individuals to think more positively about themselves than others think of them.
- The Over-confidence bias causes individuals to overestimate their own confidence.
- The Status Quo bias demonstrates that individuals give preference to things which are familiar.
- The Ingroup bias shows a preference for individuals who are in one's own group affiliation.
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- This section discusses various types of sampling biases including self-selection bias and survivorship bias.
- A common type of sampling bias is to sample too few observations from a segment of the population.
- Survivorship bias occurs when the observations recorded at the end of the investigation are a non-random set of those present at the beginning of the investigation.
- Gains in stock funds is an area in which survivorship bias often plays a role.
- Therefore, there is a bias toward selecting better-performing funds.
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- Perceptual distortions, such as cognitive bias, can result in poor judgement and irrational courses of action.
- Essentially, there must be an objective observer to identify cognitive bias in a subjective individual.
- Bias arises from various processes that can be difficult to distinguish.
- Self-serving bias - Another common bias is the tendency to take credit for success while passing the buck on failure.
- Belief bias - Individuals often make a decision before they have all the facts.
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- While some sampling variation is expected, we would expect the sample proportions to be fairly similar to the population proportions if there is no bias on juries.
- H 0 : The jurors are a random sample, i.e. there is no racial bias in who serves on a jury, and the observed counts reflect natural sampling fluctuation.
- H A : The jurors are not randomly sampled, i.e. there is racial bias in juror selection.
- To evaluate these hypotheses, we quantify how different the observed counts are from the expected counts.
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- The following are examples of statistical bias.
- Detection bias occurs when a phenomenon is more likely to be observed and/or reported for a particular set of study subjects.
- Reporting bias involves a skew in the availability of data, such that observations of a certain kind may be more likely to be reported and consequently used in research.
- Analytical bias arises due to the way that the results are evaluated.
- identify the cause behind the phenomenon because it only describes and reports observations;
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- Confounding by indication has been described as the most important limitation of observational studies.
- Confounding by indication occurs when prognostic factors cause bias, such as biased estimates of treatment effects in medical trials.
- Double blinding conceals the experiment group membership of the participants from the trial population and the observers.
- By preventing the observers from knowing of their membership, there should be no bias from researchers treating the groups differently or from interpreting the outcomes differently.
- Break down why confounding variables may lead to bias and spurious relationships and what can be done to avoid these phenomenons.
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- When interpreting data, a researcher must avoid cognitive bias and be aware of the use of heuristics to avoid drawing incorrect conclusions.
- However, this heuristic can introduce bias in research, in which it is by definition important to remain an objective observer.
- A cognitive bias is the mind's tendency to come to incorrect conclusions based on a variety of factors.
- Hindsight bias occurs in psychological research when researchers form "post hoc hypotheses."
- Confirmation bias is especially dangerous in psychological research.
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- Chance error and bias are two different forms of error associated with sampling.
- In statistics, a sampling error is the error caused by observing a sample instead of the whole population.
- If the observations are collected from a random sample, statistical theory provides probabilistic estimates of the likely size of the error for a particular statistic or estimator.
- In statistics, sampling bias is a bias in which a sample is collected in such a way that some members of the intended population are less likely to be included than others.
- Exclusion bias, or exclusion of particular groups from the sample.
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