Fred B. Bryant; John Edwards; R. Scott Tindale; Emil J. Posavac; Linda Heath; Eaaron Henderson-King; Yola Suarez-Balcazar Springer Science+Business Media (1992) Kovakantinen kirja
Fred B. Bryant (ed.); John Edwards (ed.); R. Scott Tindale (ed.); Emil J. Posavac (ed.); Linda Heath (ed.); Henderson-King Springer (2013) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Victor C. Ottati; R. Scott Tindale; John Edwards; Fred B. Bryant; Linda Heath; Yolanda Suarez-Balcazar; Emil J. Posavac Springer Science+Business Media (2002) Kovakantinen kirja
Linda Heath; R. Scott Tindale; John Edwards; Emil J. Posavac; Fred B. Bryant; Eaaron Henderson-King; Yola Suarez-Balcazar Springer Science+Business Media (1994) Kovakantinen kirja
Victor C. Ottati; R. Scott Tindale; John Edwards; Fred B. Bryant; Linda Heath; Yolanda Suarez-Balcazar; Emil J. Posavac Springer-Verlag New York Inc. (2012) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
R. Scott Tindale; Linda Heath; John Edwards; Emil J. Posavac; Fred B. Bryant; Judith Myers; Yolanda Suarez-Balcazar; Hend Springer-Verlag New York Inc. (2013) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Linda Heath (ed.); R. Scott Tindale (ed.); John Edwards (ed.); Emil J. Posavac (ed.); Fred B. Bryant (ed.); Henderson-King Springer (2013) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Many authors have argued that applying social psychology to the solution of real world problems builds better theories. Observers have claimed, for example, that of human behavior applied social psychology reveals more accurate principles because its data are based on people in real-life circumstances (Helmreich, 1975; Saxe & Fine, 1980), provides an opportunity to assess the ecological validity of generalizations derived from laboratory research (Ellsworth, 1977; Leventhal, 1980), and discloses important gaps in existing theories (Fisher, 1982; Mayo & LaFrance, 1980). Undoubtedly, many concrete examples can be mustered in support of these claims. But it also can be argued that applying social psychology to social issues and problems builds better research methods. Special methodological problems arise and new perspectives on old methodological problems emerge when re searchers leave the laboratory and tackle social problems in real-world settings. Along the way, we not only improve existing research techniques but also devel op new research tools, all of which enhance our ability to obtain valid results and thereby to understand and solve socially relevant problems. Indeed, Campbell and Stanley's (1966) seminal work on validity in research design grew out of the application of social science in field settings. In this spirit, the principal aim of this volume is to present examples of methodological advances being made as researchers apply social psychology in real-life settings.