Pseudo Effects: How Method Biases Can Produce Spurious Findings About Close Relationships.

IF 5.1 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Samantha Joel, John K Sakaluk, James J Kim, Devinder Khera, Helena Yuchen Qin, Sarah C E Stanton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Research on interpersonal relationships frequently relies on accurate self-reporting across various relationship facets (e.g., conflict, trust, appreciation). Yet shared method biases-which may greatly inflate associations between measures-are rarely accounted for during measurement validation or hypothesis testing. To examine how method biases can affect relationship research, we embarked on the ironic exploration of a new construct-Pseudo-comprised of irrelevant relationship evaluations (e.g., "My relationship has very good Saturn"). Pseudo was moderately associated with common relationship measures (e.g., satisfaction, commitment) and predicted those measures 3 weeks later. Results of a dyadic longitudinal study suggested that Pseudo taps into method biases, particularly sentiment override (i.e., people's tendency to project their global relationship sentiments onto every relationship evaluation). We conclude that psychometric standards must be sufficiently rigorous to distinguish genuine constructs and associations from methodological artifacts that can otherwise pose a serious validity threat.

伪效应:方法偏差如何产生关于亲密关系的虚假发现。
人际关系的研究经常依赖于对各种关系方面(如冲突、信任、欣赏)的准确自我报告。然而,在测量验证或假设检验期间,共享方法偏差(可能大大夸大测量之间的关联)很少被考虑在内。为了检验方法偏差如何影响关系研究,我们开始了一种新的结构的讽刺探索——由不相关的关系评估组成的伪(例如,“我的关系有很好的土星”)。Pseudo与常见的关系测量(例如,满意度,承诺)有中度相关性,并预测了3周后的这些测量。一项二元纵向研究的结果表明,Pseudo利用了方法偏差,特别是情绪凌驾(即,人们倾向于将他们的整体关系情绪投射到每一种关系评估上)。我们的结论是,心理测量标准必须足够严格,以区分真正的构念和关联与方法学上的人为因素,否则可能构成严重的有效性威胁。
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来源期刊
Psychological Science
Psychological Science PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
13.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
156
期刊介绍: Psychological Science, the flagship journal of The Association for Psychological Science (previously the American Psychological Society), is a leading publication in the field with a citation ranking/impact factor among the top ten worldwide. It publishes authoritative articles covering various domains of psychological science, including brain and behavior, clinical science, cognition, learning and memory, social psychology, and developmental psychology. In addition to full-length articles, the journal features summaries of new research developments and discussions on psychological issues in government and public affairs. "Psychological Science" is published twelve times annually.
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