Research methodology
45
The sources of variation resulting in poor reliability include:
a) Variation in the characteristic of the subject being measured. Example:
blood pressure
b) The measuring instruments, e.g. questionnaires
c) The persons collecting the information (observer variation)
Inter-observer variation:
differences between
observers in measuring
the same
observation
Intra-observer variation:
differences in measuring the same observation by the same
observer on different occasions.
b) Non Sampling error
(i.e., bias)
Bias,
the opposite of validity, consists of systematic deviations from the true value,
always in
the same direction.
It is possible to eliminate or reduce the non-sampling error (bias) by
careful design of the
sampling procedure.
Validity:
This refers to the degree of closeness between a measurement and the true value
of what is being measured. Validity
addresses the question, how close is the
measured
value
to the
true value?
To be accurate, a measuring device must be both valid and reliable. However, if one cannot
have both, validity is more important in situations when we are
interested in the absolute
value of what is being measured. Reliability on the other hand is more important when it is
not essential to know the absolute value, but rather we are interested
in finding out if there is
a trend, or to rank values.
Dostları ilə paylaş: