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research methods
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vanessa singh
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Cards (213)
What does the
experimental method
involve?
Manipulation of an
independent variable
to observe its effect on a dependent variable.
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What are the types of experiments in the
experimental method
?
Field
,
laboratory
,
quasi
, and
natural
experiments.
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What is an aim in research?
A general statement about what the
researcher
plans to
investigate
.
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How are
aims
developed in research?
Aims are developed from
theories
and
previous research
readings.
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What is a
hypothesis
?
A precise statement that describes the relationship between
variables
.
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What are the two types of
hypotheses
?
Directional and
non-directional
hypotheses.
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What does a
directional hypothesis
indicate?
It states the direction of the relationship between
variables
.
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What is a
non-directional hypothesis
?
A hypothesis that does not specify the direction of the relationship between
variables
.
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Give an example of a directional hypothesis related to sleep and memory.
"The more sleep a participant has, the better their memory performance."
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Provide an example of a non-directional hypothesis related to sleep and memory.
"The difference in the amount of hours of sleep a participant has will affect their memory performance."
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When is a directional hypothesis typically used?
When previous research suggests a particular outcome.
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What is the independent variable (IV)?
The variable that is manipulated by the researcher.
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What is the dependent variable (DV)?
The variable that is measured and affected by the IV.
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Why is it important to control extraneous variables?
To ensure that the effect on the DV is solely due to the IV.
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What are the two conditions needed to test the effect of the IV?
The experimental condition and the control condition.
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What does operationalisation of variables mean?
Clearly defining variables in terms of how they are measured.
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How can a
hypothesis
be
operationalised
?
By specifying measurable outcomes for the
variables
involved.
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What are
extraneous variables
?
Variables that are not the
IV
but may affect the
DV
.
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What are
confounding variables
?
Variables that systematically change with the
IV
and affect the
DV
.
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Give an example of a confounding variable in a sleep study.
The time of day the memory test is conducted.
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What are demand characteristics?
Cues that make participants guess the aim of the investigation.
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What is participant reactivity?
When participants change their behavior due to cues from the researcher.
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What is the 'Please-U effect'?
When participants act in a way they think the researcher wants.
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What is the 'screw-U effect'?
When participants intentionally underperform to sabotage results.
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How do demand characteristics affect research validity?
They can lead to unnatural behavior, affecting the validity of results.
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What are investigator effects?
Unwanted influences from the researcher's behavior on the DV measured.
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What is
randomisation
in research?
The use of chance to reduce bias from
investigator
effects.
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What does
standardisation
mean in research?
Using the same
procedures
and instructions for all participants.
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What are the types of
experiments
and their characteristics?
Laboratory
: High control, low
ecological validity
, experimenter's bias.
Field
: Naturalistic, high ecological validity, loss of control.
Quasi
:
IV
not manipulated, high
internal validity
, confounding variables possible.
Natural: Real-life issues, high
external validity
, difficult to replicate.
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What are the sampling methods in research?
Opportunity sampling
: Convenient, not representative,
researcher
bias.
Random sampling
: Equal chances, no bias, time-consuming.
Systematic sampling
: Fairly representative, avoids bias, not truly unbiased.
Stratified sampling
: Reflects population proportions, random selection, time-consuming.
Volunteer sampling
: Quick access,
participant
cooperation,
volunteer
bias.
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What is the definition of
experimental design
?
It is the process of planning an experiment to ensure
valid
and reliable
results
.
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What are the three main types of experimental designs?
Independent groups design
Repeated measures design
Matched pairs design
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In an
independent groups design
, how do participants engage with the
independent variable
(
IV
)?
Participants only perform in one condition of the independent variable.
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What is a strength of the
independent groups design
?
There are no
order effects
present.
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What is a limitation of the
independent groups design
?
There is no control over
participant variables
.
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How can
random allocation
address a limitation in
independent groups design
?
It ensures each participant has the same chance of being in any condition of the
IV
.
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In a
repeated measures design
, how do participants engage with the
independent variable
(IV)?
The same participants take part in all
conditions
of the IV.
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What is a strength of the
repeated measures design
?
It eliminates
participant variables
.
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What is a limitation of the
repeated measures design
?
Order effects
can be present, such as
boredom
.
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What is
counterbalancing
in repeated measures design?
It is when half of the
participants
do
conditions
in one order and the other half do it in the opposite order.
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