Save
psychology
research methods
Case Studies, Meta-Analyses and Graphs
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Created by
Huriya khan
Visit profile
Cards (29)
What is a
case study
?
An
in-depth
investigation of a single individual, event, or small group
View source
What is the typical duration of a
case study
?
They are often
longitudinal
, conducted over time
View source
Why are case studies referred to as
idiographic
?
Because they focus on the uniqueness of
behavior
and subjective experiences
View source
What types of data does a
case study
use?
Both
primary
and
secondary
data
View source
What is a
strength
of
case studies
?
They provide very rich detailed information about the case
View source
What is a weakness of
case studies
regarding
generalizability
?
Each case is unique, so
findings
are not generalizable
View source
What is
retrospective recall
in
case studies
?
It involves recalling past events, which could be distorted
View source
How can
researcher bias
affect
case studies
?
It could influence the findings if the researcher is looking for a
particular outcome
View source
What is
meta-analysis
?
A method where researchers look at findings from multiple studies to produce
statistics
View source
What type of data does a
meta-analysis
use to produce primary data?
Secondary data
View source
What is a strength of
meta-analysis
regarding
sample size
?
It allows researchers to create
larger
, more varied samples
View source
How does
meta-analysis
facilitate
generalization
?
It allows generalization across wider populations, especially in
cross-cultural
research
View source
What can
meta-analysis
help identify in research findings?
Trends and conclusions from
contradictory
results
View source
What is a weakness of
meta-analysis
related to
publication bias
?
It may omit research that is not significant, leading to
biased results
View source
Why might studies in a
meta-analysis
not be truly comparable?
Researchers may use different
techniques
View source
What does the term "
psychology and the economy
" refer to?
Research
that can have an impact on the economy
View source
What is
normal distribution
?
A data distribution that appears
symmetrical
with no bias to the left or right
View source
Give an example of a characteristic that follows a
normal distribution
.
Height, weight, or
IQ
in the population
View source
What do the values along the bottom of a
normal distribution
represent?
The
standard deviations
View source
What does it mean if data is further from the center in a
normal distribution
?
There is more
variance
in the data
View source
What is a
scattergram
?
A graphical representation of the
correlational
relationship between two
co-variables
View source
How is a
line graph
structured?
Frequency
is on the
y-axis
and data on the
x-axis
, with plotted values joined by a line
View source
What is the purpose of a
bar chart
?
To represent the
frequency
of data with categories on the
x-axis
View source
What distinguishes a
histogram
from a
bar chart
?
A histogram has a
true zero
and no spaces between the bars
View source
What does a
pie chart
represent?
The
frequency
of data as
percentages
, color-coded and labeled
View source
What are the strengths and weaknesses of
case studies
?
Strengths:
Provides rich detailed information
Investigates rare behaviors
Explores unethical manipulation of behaviors
Weaknesses:
Unique cases limit
generalizability
Retrospective recall
may be distorted
Researcher bias
may influence findings
View source
What are the strengths and weaknesses of
meta-analysis
?
Strengths:
Creates larger, varied samples
Allows
generalization
across populations
Identifies trends and resolves
contradictions
Weaknesses:
Publication bias
may skew results
Different techniques make studies not truly comparable
View source
What are the key features of
normal distribution
?
Symmetrical
data spread
No bias to the left or right
Standard deviations
indicate variance
Examples include height, weight, and
IQ
View source
What are the different types of graphs used in data representation?
Scattergram
:
Correlational
relationship between two variables
Line graph:
Continuous
data with frequency on y-axis
Bar chart:
Frequency
of data with categories on x-axis
Histogram
: Frequency distribution with true zero
Pie chart
: Frequency represented as percentages
View source