Can somebody distinguish between the two?
I hear people contradicting themselves when they try to explain it, and I want a definite answer of the difference.
Thanks
In an experiment:
Validity refers if you meet the aim of your experiment. This involves controlling variables (apart from the independent variable), having a control in some cases (usually in biology experiments), minimising all systematic errors and random errors (by taking multiple measurements to get rid of outliers, as you can't have valid results without results being reiliable...so yes BEING RELIABLE is needed to be valid).
Accuracy - How 'correct' /exact you're results are. Can be improved by using better equipment and avoiding human errors like parallax and usually by having a valid experiment.
In DATA SOURCES:
Validity: Valid if the source is trustworthy --> check authors for credentials, and contains relevant info etc.....also needs to be reliable again to be valid...
Reliability: Reliable if the information found in the source is found in other sources.
Accuracy: Whether the information is actually CORRECT. Usually a valid source will usually contain ACURRATE information but not always. Just because you have a PHD doesn't mean you can't make a mistake.