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  2. External validity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_validity

    External validity is the validity of applying the conclusions of a scientific study outside the context of that study. [1] In other words, it is the extent to which the results of a study can generalize or transport to other situations, people, stimuli, and times.

  3. Internal validity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_validity

    However, the very methods used to increase internal validity may also limit the generalizability or external validity of the findings. For example, studying the behavior of animals in a zoo may make it easier to draw valid causal inferences within that context, but these inferences may not generalize to the behavior of animals in the wild.

  4. Validity (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Validity_(statistics)

    In other words, the relevance of external and internal validity to a research study depends on the goals of the study. Furthermore, conflating research goals with validity concerns can lead to the mutual-internal-validity problem, where theories are able to explain only phenomena in artificial laboratory settings but not the real world. [13] [14]

  5. Statistical model validation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistical_model_validation

    Internal validity – Extent to which a piece of evidence supports a claim about cause and effect; Model identification – Statistical property which a model must satisfy to allow precise inference; Overfitting – Flaw in mathematical modelling; Perplexity – Concept in information theory

  6. Impact evaluation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_evaluation

    There are five key principles relating to internal validity (study design) and external validity (generalizability) which rigorous impact evaluations should address: confounding factors, selection bias, spillover effects, contamination, and impact heterogeneity. [5]

  7. Ecological validity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_validity

    Ecological validity, the ability to generalize study findings to the real world, is a subcategory of external validity. [6] Another example highlighting the differences between these terms is from an experiment that studied pointing [7] —a trait originally attributed uniquely to humans—in captive chimpanzees. This study certainly had ...

  8. Member check - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Member_check

    In qualitative research, a member check, also known as informant feedback or respondent validation, is a technique used by researchers to help improve the accuracy, credibility, validity, and transferability (also known as applicability, internal validity, [1] or fittingness) of a study. [2]

  9. Internal consistency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_consistency

    An alternative way of thinking about internal consistency is that it is the extent to which all of the items of a test measure the same latent variable. The advantage of this perspective over the notion of a high average correlation among the items of a test – the perspective underlying Cronbach's alpha – is that the average item ...