Research methods

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    Cards (38)

    • What is the null hypothesis?

      There will be no difference between conditions and any difference will be due to chance.
    • What does a directional hypothesis indicate?

      It shows the direction in which the results will go.
    • What is a non-directional hypothesis?

      It states that there will be a difference but no direction.
    • What characterizes a lab experiment?

      It involves manipulation of the independent variable (IV) under highly controlled conditions.
    • How does a field experiment differ from a lab experiment?

      A field experiment is conducted in a real-world situation where participants often don't know they are being studied.
    • What is a natural experiment?

      It takes advantage of a pre-existing difference between people or situations.
    • What are extraneous variables?

      Variables that are not controlled for and may generate bias.
    • What are situational variables?

      Aspects of the environment that affect behavior.
    • What are participant variables?

      Variables which each participant varies from the others and how it affects results.
    • What is a confounding variable?

      A variable that is not controlled for in the experiment and has an effect on the results.
    • What is a case study?

      Studying one person in detail, which can be conducted in the field or lab.
    • What is a quasi-experiment?

      It manipulates the IV but is based on an existing difference between groups, such as age or gender.
    • What is random sampling?

      Every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected.
    • What is volunteer sampling?

      Participants become part of a study because they volunteer when asked, often used if research is socially sensitive.
    • What is opportunity sampling?

      Taking participants who are available at the time the study is carried out based on the criteria they are looking for.
    • What is snowball sampling?

      It involves recruiting a small number of participants and asking them to recommend others who fit the research criteria.
    • What is stratified sampling?

      It involves classifying the population into categories and choosing a sample consisting of participants from each category in the same proportions as they are in the population.
    • What are the key ethical considerations in research?
      • Informed consent
      • Deception
      • Right to withdraw
      • Protection from harm
      • Confidentiality
      • Working with animals
    • What is ethnocentrism?

      Seeing the world from only one's cultural perspective, believing this perspective is normal.
    • What is cultural relativism?

      Behavior can only be understood within its cultural context.
    • What is alpha bias?

      It exaggerates or overestimates differences between the sexes.
    • What is beta bias?

      It ignores, minimizes, or underestimates differences between men or women.
    • What are the main types of hypotheses?
      • Null hypothesis
      • Directional hypothesis
      • Non-directional hypothesis
    • What are the main types of experiments?
      • Lab experiment
      • Field experiment
      • Natural experiment
      • Quasi-experiment
    • What are the main types of variables?
      • Extraneous variables
      • Situational variables
      • Participant variables
      • Confounding variables
    • What are the main sampling techniques?
      • Random sampling
      • Volunteer sampling
      • Opportunity sampling
      • Snowball sampling
      • Stratified sampling
    • What are the main ethical considerations in research?
      • Informed consent
      • Deception
      • Right to withdraw
      • Protection from harm
      • Confidentiality
      • Working with animals
    • counter balancing
      • preventing order effects from disrupting the findings of an experiment
    • meta analysis
      • combines and synthesises findings from multiple independent studies to estimate the average effect for a particular research
    • peer review
      • where two experts who are in similar reviews to peer review the same article.
      • this helps to identify weaknesses and improve validity
    • Test retest
      • when you give the same person the same experiment on two different occasions
      • if the results are similar or the same, it increases the validity of the test
    • inter-observer reliability
      • comparing results from different observers observing the same study, and understanding results
    • content analysis
      • determines the presence of certain patterns or words in qualatative data
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