Types of experiments

    Cards (22)

    • What are the different types of experiments discussed in the video?
      Lab, Field, Natural, and Quasi experiments
    • What is the main principle of a laboratory experiment?
      The experimenter has full control over what happens in the experiment
    • What are variables in a lab experiment?
      Factors that are controlled and do not vary between conditions
    • What is the independent variable in an experiment?
      The factor that is changed between conditions
    • What is the dependent variable in an experiment?
      The variable that is measured to see the effect of the independent variable
    • How might changing the color of light in a room affect an experiment?
      It could influence the recall of numbers
    • What is a strength of lab experiments regarding cause and effect relationships?
      They allow for confidence in suggesting a cause and effect relationship
    • What does high internal validity in lab experiments mean?
      What is measured is true and due to the change in the independent variable
    • What is a disadvantage of lab experiments related to external validity?
      They may not generalize to real-world environments
    • What is meant by ecological validity?
      The extent to which findings can be generalized to real-world settings
    • What is mundane realism?
      The extent to which tasks used in an experiment resemble real-world tasks
    • What are demand characteristics in an experiment?
      When participants change their behavior because they know they are being studied
    • What is the main advantage of field experiments over lab experiments?
      They are conducted in real-world settings, increasing ecological validity
    • What is a disadvantage of field experiments related to internal validity?
      They lack control over extraneous variables
    • What are extraneous variables?
      Variables that can change measurements of the dependent variable
    • What is the difference between a natural experiment and a lab experiment?
      A natural experiment measures changes in the dependent variable that have already occurred naturally
    • What is a strength of natural experiments?
      They allow research in areas that could not be studied otherwise
    • What is a disadvantage of natural experiments regarding cause and effect relationships?
      There may be other factors influencing the dependent variable
    • Why can natural experiments not be replicated easily?
      Because the situations occur naturally and are often rare
    • What defines a quasi-experiment?
      It involves groups that cannot be randomly assigned to conditions
    • What is a strength of quasi-experiments?
      They are the only way to study certain factors like age or gender
    • What are confounding variables?
      Factors that change systematically between conditions and cannot be controlled
    See similar decks