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Judgment Studies

Judgment Studies

Judgment Studies

Design, Analysis, and Meta-Analysis
Robert Rosenthal, Harvard University, Massachusetts
November 2008
Available
Paperback
9780521101479

    Because of the complexity of human behaviour a great many research variables must be constructed from the building blocks of human judgement. A teacher's warmth, a psychotherapist's ability to create rapport, a patient's inner state - these all tend ultimately to be defined by the judgements of others. The purpose of this book is to describe the design, the analysis and the meta-analysis of studies employing judgements in sufficient detail that readers can conduct such studies, and more wisely evaluate them. While the author's examples are drawn primarily from research on non-verbal behaviour, the book is designed for any investigators employing judges, observers, raters, coders, or decoders, whether or not the behaviour being assessed is non-verbal. Judgment Studies: Design, Analysis, and Meta-Analysis constitutes a unique resource for advanced students and researchers in the behavioural and social sciences. It offers the first integrated summary of methodological issues in judgement studies, and the first guide to their planning and analysis.

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...invites the interest of any who would evaluate judgment studies or learn to conduct them...a valuable source of guidance..." Contemporary Psychology

    "...consistently clear and characterized by admirable good sense." Contemporary Sociology

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 2008
    Paperback
    9780521101479
    268 pages
    229 × 152 × 15 mm
    0.4kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Part I. The Design of Judgement Studies:
    • 1. The nature of judgement studies
    • 2. Sampling judges and encoders
    • 3. Stimulus selection and presentation
    • 4. Judges' responses
    • Part II. The Analysis of Judgement Studies:
    • 5. Forming composites and other re-descriptions of variables
    • 6. Significance testing and effect size estimation
    • 7. The interpretation of interaction effects
    • 8. Contrasts: focused comparisons in the analysis of data
    • 9. Contrasts in repeated-measures designs
    • Part III. The Meta-Analysis of Judegment Studies:
    • 10. Comparing and combining judgement studies
    • 11. Combining probabilities
    • Appendix
    • References
    • Name index
    • Subject index.
      Author
    • Robert Rosenthal , Harvard University, Massachusetts