Research Methods

Cards (29)

  • What is the main principle of a laboratory experiment?

    The experimenter has full control over what happens in the experiment
  • What are environmental factors in a lab experiment?

    Factors like noise, temperature, and instructions given to participants
  • What is the independent variable in an experiment?

    The factor that is changed between conditions
  • What is the dependent variable in an experiment?

    The variable that is measured to see the effect of the independent variable
  • How might changing the color of light in a room affect an experiment?
    It could influence the recall of numbers
  • What is a key advantage of lab experiments?

    They allow for a confident suggestion of a cause and effect relationship
  • What does high internal validity in lab experiments mean?

    What they have measured is true and due to the independent variable
  • What is ecological validity?

    The extent to which findings can be generalized to real-world settings
  • What is mundane realism?

    The extent to which tasks used in an experiment resemble real-world tasks
  • What are demand characteristics?

    When participants change their behavior because they know they are in an experiment
  • What is a field experiment?

    An experiment conducted in a real-world setting
  • What is a strength of field experiments?

    They have increased external validity due to naturalistic behavior
  • What is mundane realism in field experiments?

    The tasks used are more likely to be real-world tasks
  • What is a weakness of field experiments?

    Lack of control over extraneous variables
  • What are extraneous variables?

    Variables that may change the measurement of the dependent variable
  • What is a natural experiment?

    An experiment where the independent variable has already occurred naturally
  • What is a strength of natural experiments?

    They allow research in areas that could not be studied otherwise
  • What is a weakness of natural experiments?

    Researchers have no control over the experiment
  • What is a quasi-experiment?

    An experiment where participants cannot be randomly assigned to conditions
  • What is a strength of quasi-experiments?

    They are the only way to study certain factors
  • What is a weakness of quasi-experiments?

    Differences in groups may go beyond group membership
  • What are the strengths and weaknesses of laboratory experiments?
    Strengths:
    • High internal validity
    • High replicability
    • Clear cause and effect relationships

    Weaknesses:
    • Low external validity
    • Lack of ecological validity
    • Demand characteristics
  • What are the strengths and weaknesses of field experiments?

    Strengths:
    • Increased external validity
    • Higher ecological validity
    • More naturalistic behavior

    Weaknesses:
    • Lack of control over extraneous variables
    • Reduced internal validity
  • What are the strengths and weaknesses of natural experiments?

    Strengths:
    • Research in ethically sensitive areas
    • High external validity

    Weaknesses:
    • No control over variables
    • Cannot replicate easily
  • What are the strengths and weaknesses of quasi-experiments?

    Strengths:
    • Only way to study certain factors

    Weaknesses:
    • Confounding variables may exist
  • What is the purpose of the tutorial videos mentioned in the study material?

    To cover the AS and A-level research methods sections with examples and exam tips
  • Who can access the tutorial videos on psych boost?
    Patrons at the neuron level and above
  • What is the role of patrons in the development of the research methods unit?

    Their support allows the creator to teach part-time and produce content
  • What is the final topic discussed in the video?
    Observations