IMAGES

  1. What Is Generalisability?

    generalizability of findings in research

  2. 2. scientific investigation

    generalizability of findings in research

  3. (PDF) Examining the generalizability of research findings from archival data

    generalizability of findings in research

  4. Examining the generalizability of research findings from archival data

    generalizability of findings in research

  5. Limitations That Affect the Generalizability of Research Results in 2020 : Current School News

    generalizability of findings in research

  6. (PDF) Examining the generalizability of research findings from archival data

    generalizability of findings in research

VIDEO

  1. Chapter 14: Generalization

  2. The Limits of Interaction Research

  3. ACE 745: Research Report (IUP)

  4. Maximizing the Impact of S-STEM Grants: Creative Ways to Disseminate Findings

  5. Best Practices for Causal (Cause & Effect) Inference and Validity in Experimental Research Design

  6. Exploring Research Methodologies in the Social Sciences (4 Minutes)

COMMENTS

  1. What Is Generalizability?

    Generalizability is the degree to which you can apply the results of your study to a broader context. Research results are considered generalizable when the findings can be applied to most contexts, most people, most of the time. Example: Generalizability. Suppose you want to investigate the shopping habits of people in your city.

  2. Validity, reliability, and generalizability in qualitative research

    Generalizability. Most qualitative research studies, if not all, are meant to study a specific issue or phenomenon in a certain population or ethnic group, of a focused locality in a particular context, hence generalizability of qualitative research findings is usually not an expected attribute. However, with rising trend of knowledge synthesis ...

  3. Generalizability: Linking Evidence to Practice

    The basic concept of generalizability is simple: the results of a study are generalizable when they can be applied (are useful for informing a clinical decision) to patients who present for care. Clinicians must make reasoned decisions about generalizability of research findings beyond a study population. This requires nuanced understanding of ...

  4. Generalizing study results: a potential outcomes perspective

    Generalizability is a characteristic of the relationship between results from a specific study sample and a specific target population, not a characteristic of a study alone. Therefore, to make meaningful inference about the generalizability of study results, the target population of interest must be well-defined. 9 , 16 - 19 Study results ...

  5. When assessing generalisability, focusing on differences in population

    Assessing generalisability. Establishing the parameters of where and when evidence may be generalisable is a complex undertaking. Although several frameworks and checklists have been developed to help researchers and/or decision-makers assess generalisability, none have been widely used [3, 4].It could be argued that, unlike internal validity, generalisability is a more subjective judgement ...

  6. Generalization in quantitative and qualitative research: Myths and

    Donmoyer (1990) also cautioned against directly generalizing from research findings to specific individuals in specific circumstances. Evidence with high potential for generalizability represents a good starting starting point—a working hypothesis that must be evaluated within a context of clinical expertise and patient preferences.

  7. Generalizability of Research Results

    An essential element of scientific realism is the frequent and long-term corroboration of statements based on empirical tests. From an empirical perspective, it is about the question of generalizability, and to what extent empirical findings on the same statement found in various other studies are confirmed.The current chapter deals with approaches in which different results are summarized for ...

  8. Generalizability: Linking Evidence to Practice

    to generalizability. Study results will be applicable to the patient in front of you as long as you can deliver the intervention in the same way as in the study. Clinicians must make reasoned deci-sions about generalizability of research findings beyond a study population. This requires nuanced understanding of the

  9. Promoting Rigorous Research: Generalizability and Qualitative Research

    First, we describe types of generalizability, the use of trustworthiness criteria, and strategies for maximizing generalizability within and across studies, then we discuss how the research approaches of grounded theory, autoethnography, content analysis, and metasynthesis can yield greater generalizability of findings.

  10. Examining the generalizability of research findings from ...

    The present research constitutes a systematic and simultaneous test of the reproducibility and generalizability of a large set of archival findings. It also remains unknown if scientists are generally optimistic, pessimistic, or fairly accurate about whether findings generalize to new situations.

  11. What Is Generalisability?

    Generalisability is the degree to which you can apply the results of your study to a broader context. Research results are considered generalisable when the findings can be applied to most contexts, most people, most of the time. Example: Generalisability. Suppose you want to investigate the shopping habits of people in your city.

  12. Generalizability in Qualitative Research: A Tale of Two Traditions

    Abstract. Generalizability in qualitative research has been a controversial topic given that interpretivist scholars have resisted the dominant role and mandate of the positivist tradition within social sciences. Aiming to find universal laws, the positivist paradigm has made generalizability a crucial criterion for evaluating the rigor of ...

  13. Generalizability: Linking Evidence to Practice

    The basic concept of generalizability is simple: the results of a study are generalizable when they can be applied (are useful for informing a clinical decision) to patients who present for care. Clinicians must make reasoned decisions about generalizability of research findings beyond a study population. This requires nuanced understanding of the condition that defines the population, the ...

  14. Generalizability and qualitative research: A new look at an ongoing

    The potential for generalization of research findings is among the most divisive of concerns facing psychologists. An article by Roald, Køppe, Jensen, Hansen, and Levin argues that generalizability is not only a relevant concern but an inescapable dimension of qualitative research, directly challenging the view that generalization and generalizability apply only to quantitative research. Thus ...

  15. What Is Generalizability In Research?

    Defining Generalizability. Generalizability refers to the extent to which a study's findings can be extrapolated to a larger population. It's about making sure that your findings apply to a large number of people, rather than just a small group. Generalizability ensures research findings are credible and reliable.

  16. Guide: Understanding Generalizability and Transferability

    The findings of research projects often guide important decisions about specific practices and policies. The choice of which approach to use may reflect the interests of those conducting or benefitting from the research and the purposes for which the findings will be applied. ... Students' Rating of Instruction: Generalizability of Findings ...

  17. Generalization in quantitative and qualitative research: myths and

    MeSH terms. Generalization, which is an act of reasoning that involves drawing broad inferences from particular observations, is widely-acknowledged as a quality standard in quantitative research, but is more controversial in qualitative research. The goal of most qualitative studies is not to generalize but ra ….

  18. Generalizability

    Abstract. Clinical and epidemiologic investigations are paying increasing attention to the critical constructs of "representativeness" of study samples and "generalizability" of study results. This is a laudable trend and yet, these key concepts are often misconstrued and conflated, masking the central issues of internal and external ...

  19. (PDF) Validity, Reliability, Generalizability

    1. Learning Outcome. The present module is designed to give the students a thorough under standing of the. key research concepts of validity, reliability and generalizability. By the end of the ...

  20. Examining the generalizability of research findings from ...

    Some original findings were associated with multiple new tests. Reproducibility was the best predictor of generalizability-for the findings that proved directly reproducible, 84% emerged in other available time periods and 57% emerged in other geographies. Overall, only limited empirical evidence emerged for context sensitivity.

  21. Exploring age and gender variations in root canal morphology of

    The research on mandibular premolars' root canal anatomy has been extensive and well-documented in existing literature. However, there appears to be a notable gap in available data concerning the root canal anatomy of maxillary premolars. ... It also increases the generalizability of the findings to the target population. Inclusion and ...

  22. Structural Podcast Content Modeling with Generalizability

    Scientific Significance Application of generalizability weights can be a potentially useful tool to improve generalizability of RCT findings. (Am J Addict 2018;XX:1-7)

  23. Development and validation of a predictive model for the risk of

    For example, some models have small sample sizes, which may limit their generalizability and applicability to different older adults . Additionally, some models rely on predictor variables that are difficult and time-consuming to collect, ... which is consistent with previous research findings [37, 38]. The reason for the analysis may be that ...

  24. Clinical Trial Generalizability Assessment in the Big Data Era: A

    Nevertheless, < 40% of studies in our review assessed a priori generalizability. Research culture and regulatory policy adaptation are also needed to change the practice of trial design (e.g., relaxing restrictive eligibility criteria) toward better trial generalizability. ... Stuart, E.A. & Mojtabai, R. Generalizability of the findings from a ...

  25. Enhance Research Generalizability in Business Management

    In business management, ensuring that your research findings are applicable across various contexts is crucial. Generalizability refers to the extent to which the results of a study can be applied ...

  26. Unveiling Bias in Second Language Acquisition Research: A Critical

    Unveiling Bias in Second Language Acquisition Research: A Critical Examination of Convenience Sampling and Implications for Generalizability: ... partial support for the initial-study results, most replications did not (Godfroid & Andringa, 2023). In other words, findings obtained with university students did not necessarily seem true for the ...

  27. Scientists Identify Diet That May Keep Women Healthy As They Age

    The findings of the ... This limits the generalizability of the findings to other populations. As a result, the researchers said future research is warranted to verify these findings in other ...

  28. Best Practices and Methodological Strategies for Addressing

    The generalizability of findings in neuropsychology has implications both for adequate theory building (e.g., understanding of human behavior) and practice (e.g., appropriate diagnostic information). Despite increasing calls for cultural competence in neuropsychology, additional resources are needed to expand the research available to inform ...

  29. Limit these ultra-processed foods for longer-term health, 30-year study

    Eating high levels of ultra-processed foods linked with higher risk of death, study finds 04:04. New research is adding to the evidence linking ultra-processed foods to health concerns. The study ...

  30. Is patients' activities of daily living self-care score in Norwegian

    Background Prolonged standing at work may contribute to increased risk of musculoskeletal pain in home care workers. Patients' activities of daily living (ADL) score may be a proxy for home care workers' standing time at work. The objective of the present study was to investigate the association between patients' ADL self-care score, and workers standing time. Methods This cross ...