Ecological validity

Ecological validity

Ecological validity is a form of validity in a research study. For a research study to possess ecological validity, the methods, materials and setting of the study must approximate the real-life situation that is under investigation.Brewer, M. (2000). Research Design and Issues of Validity. In Reis, H. and Judd, C. (eds) "Handbook of Research Methods in Social and Personality Psychology." Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.] Unlike internal and external validity, ecological validity is not necessary to the overall validity of a study.Shadish, W., Cook, T., and Campbell, D. (2002). "Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Designs for Generalized Causal Inference" Boston:Houghton Mifflin.]

External vs. ecological validity

Ecological validity is often confused with external validity (which deals with the ability of a study's results to generalize). While these forms of validity are closely related, they are independent--a study may possess external validity but not ecological validity, and vice-versa . For example, mock-jury research is designed to study how people might act if they were jurors during a trial, but many mock-jury studies simply provide written transcripts or summaries of trials, and do so in classroom or office settings. Such experiments do not approximate the actual look, feel and procedure of a real courtroom trial, and therefore lack ecological validity. However, the more important concern is that of external validity--if the results from such mock-jury studies generalize to "real" trials, then the research is valid as a whole, despite its ecological shortcomings. Nonetheless, improving the ecological validity of an experiment typically improves the external validity as well.

ee also

*external validity
*construct validity
*content validity
*statistical conclusion validity

References


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