Also in chapter 5, you will need to relate your findings to
your theories that you discussed in your proposal. Questions to ask yourself
are: What does the theory predict should happen in the study? How are my
results similar or different from the predictions? If your findings are
different from the theory's predictions, why do you think that might be the
case? If there a way to modify the theory to incorporate your results?
You must also think through the implications of your
results. Given that the findings are correct, what does this mean for the
population? How could such findings be explained? Here's an example from one of my papers. We found that people over 85 who had
escorts when they visited their physician, tended to indicate they liked their
physician more and considered them more kind than people who went alone. What
are the implications of such a finding? Some that we suggested are: it may be
that escorts encourage patients to change physicians if they do not approve of
them. On the other hand, having someone else approve of the physician may cause
a halo effect (Greenwald & Banaji, 1995), improving the oldest-olds' perception
of the physician. An alternative, is those who like their physician may be more
motivated to get treatment, and thus more likely to secure an escort. Are there
further ideas that you have thought of?
Notice that the reference given (Greenwald & Banaji,
1995) has probably not been previously discussed in the literature review.
There would have been no reason to discuss halo effects before we had the
results from the study.
Next time,
we will welcome spring. Do you have an
issue or a question that you would like me to discuss in a future post? Send me
an email with your ideas. leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
Greenwald,
A. & Banaji, M.R. (1995). Implicit Social Cognition: Attitudes,
self-esteem, and stereotypes. Psychological
Review, 102(1), 4-27.
Stadtlander,
L., Giles, M., Sickel, A., Brooks, E., Brown, C., Cormell, M., Ewing, L., Hart,
D., Koons, D., Olson, C., Parker, P., Semenova, V., & Stoneking, S. (2013).
Independent Living Oldest-Old and Their Primary Health Provider: A Mixed Method
Examination of the Influence of Patient Personality Characteristics. Journal of Applied Gerontology.
(Available in Walden Library's Psychology/ Sage database)
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