Psychology - Research Methods

    Cards (101)

    • Experimental method
      psychologist belived the study of human behaviour should be conducted scientifcially
      so they conduct ecxperiments
    • What is an aim?

      an idea of what the study is trying to achieve
      e.g see if stress effects our memory
    • What is a hypothesis
      predicts what we expect to find
    • What is an independant and dependant variable

      IV= a variable that the researcher chnages, DP= what the researcher is measuring to see if Iv has affected iot.
    • what is the difference between a directional and non- directional hypothesis
      Directional = states the direction the results will go in wheras non directional just states that one factor will effect another.
    • what is the difference between a null hypothesis and alternative hypothesis
      null hypothesis states theres no relationship between the two variables being studied , whereas alternative hypothesis theres a relationship between two variabes studied. ( one has an effect on the other )
    • verbal fluency
      the ability to talk without pausing or stopping
    • what are extraneous variables
      Additional or unwanted variables that effect the experiment other the IV
    • What are confounding variables?

      Extraneous variables that change systematically with IV so aren't recognised if they impact DP e.g time changes with IV
    • What are demand characteristics?

      Cue from researchers or research situation that participant interprets as revealing the aim of investigation

      This may result in a change in their behaviour
    • What are investigator effects?

      Any effect of the investigators behaviour on the research outcome
    • Standardisation
      All participants should experiences the same environment, information and experience = minimises chance of extraneous variables
    • randomisation
      Use of change method to control
      Effects of bias when designing materials
    • experimental design
      Experiment must at least two conditions but they can be arranged in variety of ways
    • Repeated meaures design
      Same participants take part in both conditions
    • what are the limitations of repeated meaures
      - order effects : order they do tasks may effect performance
      - Gives participant opportunity to practice task and may makes them bored/tired
      - participant may figure out aim of study ( demand characteristics)
    • how does couterbalancing solve the limitaion of repeated mesaures
      It ensures each condition is tested first or second in equal amounts
    • independant group design
      Only one group does each condition
    • what are the problems with indpendant group design
      Natural variation between participants abilities and characteristics may affect the DV measurements
    • how does random allocation solve the problems with indpendant group design

      It theoretically distributes participants evenly
    • matched participants design
      When participants are matched based on Similar characteristics but each only do one condition
    • what are the issues with matched participants design
      - Time consuming
      - expensive
      - exact match not possible
      - no possible to control all participant variables
    • how do psycholgist solve the issues with matched participants
      Restrict the number of variables to match participants on
      - conduct a pilot study to consider key variables
    • name two advantages of independant group studies
      - participants will not guess aim (only tested once)
      - no order effect ( can't practice )
    • name two advanatges of repeated measures
      - controls participant variables ( same person so same characteristics )
      - fewer participants ( cheaper, less time spent recruiting )
    • name two disadvanatges to independant group design
      - Order effects ( may do better when doing similar task twice )
      - participant may guess aims ( decreasing validity of the results £
    • explain two disadvanatages to matched pairs
      - Matching is not perfect ( can be time consuming and can't control all relevant variables )
      - more participants ( need twice as many participants = expensive )
    • explain two disadvantages of repeated meaures
      - order effects are a problem
      - participant guess aims ( may guess, deceases validity )
    • explain two adv of matched pairs
      - Participant variables controlled ( matched on variables relevant to experiment )
      - no order effects
    • whats an laboratory experiment
      Experiment conducted in a highly controlled environment, every variable controlled.
      - Researcher changes IV (stimulus) and records response (DV)
    • whats an field experiment
      IV is manipulated in a more natural, everyday setting

      E.g public
    • whats an natural experiment
      - Researcher takes advantages of a naturally occurring IV ( e.g child age 5 or natural diaster )
      - dosent manipulate IV but records DV ( dv could be natural e.g exam results )
      E.g takes places in two different cultures and analyses parenting styles
    • What's a quasi experiment?

      In a controlled setting, but doesn't manipulate iv it simply exists
      E.g age/gender
    • What are the strengths of a lab experiment
      - extrenous variables minimised
      - can be easily replicated
      -well controlled (iv and dv can be tightly controlled and meaured)
    • whats the strengths of field experiments?

      - particpants usually unware being studied (minimises demand characteristics )= high external validity
      - less artificial than lab more natural increased ecological validity (people act as they acc are= high mudane realism)
    • weaknesses of natural experiments
      - random allocation of participants to each conditon is not possible (reasearcher less sure whether iv links to dv)
      - natural occurring events may be rare (decreases opportunity of gathering research)
      - cant replicate experiment and try get similar results (no control over IV and its relation to DV)
    • whats the weaknesses of quasi experiments
      - cannot randomly allocate people to conditions (as characteristics are fixed risk of confounding variables )
      - particpants may be aware their being studied
      - Iv cannot be changed by researcher so we cannot be sure it is the reason behing any observable change.
    • Strengths of natural experiments
      - allows research where iv can be manipulated that might have not been allowed to happen otherwise for ethical or practical reasons (e.g study of romanian orphans )
      -enables psychologist to study real world problems and issues (e.g effect of natural diaster on stress levels )
    • Strengths of quasi experiments
      - allows comparison between types of people
      - carried out under controled conditons so varibales can be controlled)(same strengths as lab )
    • weaknesses of lab experimensts
      - artificial situation - lacks generalisability
      - participants are aware that their in an experiment (demand characteristics )
      - tasks particpants are asked to carry out may not reflect how they would in real life ( low mudane realism) .
    See similar decks