Only focused on male participants, only viewing things from their perspective.
Applications
How the findings of a particular study can be used to explain or describe behavior and experience in an everyday situation
Case study
A research method that involves looking into detail at a single person, event or organisation
confounding variables
a variable which has an unintentional effect on thedependent variable
Correlation
A measure of how strongly two variables are related to eachother
Covert observation
an observational research method where the participants are not informed and unaware that they are being observed and data recorded
Ecological Validity
Refers to how well a study can be related to or reflects everyday life
Ethical Guidelines
A set of guidelines which psychologists carrying out research should follow
Ethnocentrism
A tendency to perceive the world from your own cultural group
Experimental designs
These are methods of using the participants within an experiment - independent measures, repeated measures, matched pairs
Extraneous Variables
Variables that are controlled by the experimenter because they might interfere with the investigation
Field Experiment
Involves direct manipulation of an independent variable and measurement of a dependent variable but takes place in a natural environment
Focus Group
Involves a group of participants being interviewed at the same time
Generalisability
results from one sample of participants can be applied to a wider group
Gynocentrism
only focused on female participants
Internal Validity
A measure of whether results obtained are solely affected by changed in the variable being affected
True experiment
Involves direct manipulation of the independent variable and measurement of the dependent variable
Longitudinal
Research on a group that are followed up on after a period of time
Overt observation
aresearch method where the participants have consented
Participant bias
Participants changing their behaviour in response to the research being conducted
Qualitative data
Data that describes meaningand experiences
Quantitative data
Data that focuses on numbers and frequencies
Quasi/Natural experiment
A research method that involves indirect manipulation of an independent variable
Reductionism (Being reductionist)
The argument that we can explain behaviour and experiences by reference to only one factor, such as physiology or learning, ignoring deeper explanations
Reliability
This refers to how consistent a measuring device is
Representativity
How well results can compare to other groups/to the target population
Researcher bias
When a researcher influences the findings and conclusion of a study in order to demonstrate their desired outcome
Sampling techniques
Techniques for recruiting participants to take part in a study
Survey/Questionnaire
A research method where participants are provided with written questions for them to answer
Temporal Validity
This is high when research findings successfully apply across time
Interview
A research method that involves asking participants questions on a one-to-one basis allowing them to self-report their behaviours, thoughts and feelings etc.
W.E.I.R.D Participants
Westernised, educated, industrialised, rich, democratic. Psychological research is conducted on these types of participants
single blind
the researcher or the participants don't know which group the participants belong to.
double blind
both the researcher and the participant knew which group the participant belongs to.