definitions

    Cards (23)

    • types of extraneous variables
      situational variables, participant variables, investigator variables
    • situational variables

      due to the environment (e.g noise)
    • participant variables
      due to the participants background (e.g likes and interests)
    • investigator variables

      due to behavior exhibited by the investigator, unconsciously conveying experimenter bias (e.g being rude to a participant)
    • demand characteristics
      unnatural behavior as a result of cues from the researcher or situation, which are interpreted as revealing the purpose of the experiment. could cause social desirability bias, and affect results.
    • social desirability bias
      answering in a manner that will be favorable by others (e.g telling your doctor that you exercise 5x a week, rather than the actual amount of 3x)
    • social desirability bias (simple)

      giving people the answer you think they would like to hear
    • investigator effects
      effect of investigators un/conscious behavior (e.g design of the stud, selection and interaction with participants)
    • randomisation
      the use of chance, to control the effects of bias (e.g when making decisions, designing order and conditions)
    • standardisation
      ensuring everything is the same- formalised procedures and instructions for all participants (e.g everyone takes the same memory test)
    • mundane realism

      measure of external validity. recording the extent to which experimental findings can be generalised for the real world
    • mundane realism (simple)

      how natural an experiment seems, and how close it is to real life
    • the pilot study (simple)
      a practice version
    • the pilot study
      small scale version to allow a researcher to test run and modify if necessary before the experiment takes place
    • pilot study- self report
      surveys and interviews, questions can be trialed in advance to remove or reword any ambiguous questions that may cause confusion
    • single blind procedure

      only doctor knows the aim of the experiment, to control confounding effects of demand characteristics
    • double blind procedure
      doctor and patients are unaware of the aim of the experiment, an independent individual only knows which is real and placebo
    • placebo
      a substance with no therapeutic effect, used as a control
    • extraneous variable

      all variables other than the independent variable- need to be controlled
    • confounding variable
      type of extraneous variable that can't be controlled. produces an unwanted effect on dependent variable and distorts findings by obscuring the effect of the independent variable
    • quantitative data
      numerical basis (e.g stress ratings)
    • qualitative data
      non numerical, narrative or descriptive form (verbal, reports)
    • experimental methods
      researcher always intervenes directly by manipulating the situation, one variable is always changed (IV)