experimental design is how levels of the IV are delivered.
independentgroups uses a differentgroup per condition. involves two or more seperate sets who represent just one condition of the IV.
repeated measures
uses same participants in all conditions
matched pairs
involves two sets of participants similar to independent measures but they are matched in pairs based on a pre test of a key variable e.g. score on a test. pairs are then compared rather than whole groups.
advantage of independent groups
no order effects
disadvantage of independent groups
more participant variables
more costly
using random allocation helps overcome participant variables in independent groups.
advantages of repeated measures
high validity because participant variables are controlled
disadvantages of repeated measures
high order effects (getting better/bored at something the 2nd, 3rd time which results in better/worse results)
demand characteristics due to participants guessing the study
a way to get rid of order effects in repeated measures is counter balancing, where half of the group does condition A then B, and the other does B then A.
advantages of matched pairs
removes order effects/DCs as pairs only do one condition
difficult to match participants on all important key characteristics
one way to get around difficulty of matching pairs on key characteristics is pilot studies.
how to overcome order effects:
counterbalancing
randomisation
random allocation
randomisation
material for each experiment is placed in a random order for the participant. e.g. the same words are presented but in a different order for each participant
random allocation
pulling names out of a hat. a non-biased method to allocate participants to experimental and control conditions in an experiment in independent groups design.