Experimental Designs

    Cards (5)

    • What are experimental designs?
      The different ways in which participants can be organised in relation to the experimental conditions.
      --> experimental designs: independent measures, repeated measures or matched pairs
    • Experimental design: Independent measures
      Independent measures = participants are allocated to different groups where each group represents just one experimental condition.
      --> positives:
      • less demand characteristics
      • no order effects (effect caused by order in which conditions are done)
      --> negative:
      • participant's variables e.g. IQ, motivation, gender
    • Experimental design: Repeated measures
      Repeated measures = all participants take part in all conditions of the experiment
      --> positive:
      • no participant variables (same data of participants in both conditions)
      --> negatives:
      • more demand characteristics
      • order effects (however can be resolved by counterbalancing)
    • What is counterbalancing?
      An attempt to control for the effects of order in a repeated measures design: half the participants experience the conditions in one order, and the other half in the opposite order.
    • Experimental design: Matched pairs
      Matched pairs = Pairs of participants are first matched on some variable(s) that may affect the dependent variable. Then one member of the pair is assigned to Condition A and the other to Condition B.
      --> positives:
      • not as many demand characteristics
      • no order effects
      • less participant variables
      --> negatives: (why it's the least used experimental design)
      • difficult to match accurately on all relevant participant variables
      • takes time