Revisão Revisado por pares

The Internet as Psychological Laboratory

2005; Annual Reviews; Volume: 57; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1146/annurev.psych.57.102904.190048

ISSN

1545-2085

Autores

Linda J. Skitka, Edward G. Sargis,

Tópico(s)

Focus Groups and Qualitative Methods

Resumo

This chapter reviews studies published in American Psychological Association (APA) journals from 2003-2004 and additional studies (received in response to listserv requests) that used the Internet to collect data (N=121 total studies). Specific examples of three kinds of Web-based research are reviewed: (a) translational (established methods and research questions are adapted to the Web), (b) phenomenological (behavior on the Web is the focus of study), and (c) novel (methodologically innovations unique to Web-based research). Among other findings, our review indicated that 21% of APA journals published at least one article that reported on Web-based research, most Web-based psychological research uses experimental methods, a surprising number use college student samples, and deception in Web-based research is not uncommon. Strengths and weaknesses of Web-based psychological research in general, and our sample of studies in particular, are reviewed with special attention to possible concerns about sampling and the use of deception.

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