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research methods
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Cards (42)
What does the aim of a study represent?
A general
statement
covering the topic
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Why is the aim important in research?
It identifies the
purpose
of the research
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How is the aim expressed in research?
As a straightforward
expression
of intent
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What is an example of a research aim?
To investigate the
effect
of
caffeine
on
memory
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What is a hypothesis?
A
testable
statement predicting research
outcomes
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How do hypotheses differ from aims?
Hypotheses
are
precise
and unambiguous
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What are the two types of hypothesis?
Null hypothesis
and
alternative
hypothesis
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What does the alternative hypothesis include?
Independent variable
and dependent variable
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How should the independent variable be operationalized?
By specifying how it will be
manipulated
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How should the dependent variable be operationalized?
By specifying how it will be
measured
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What is a directional hypothesis?
It predicts the direction of the
difference
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What is a non-directional hypothesis?
It predicts a
difference
without direction
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Give an example of a directional hypothesis.
Caffeine
improves memory recall
compared
to water
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Give an example of a non-directional hypothesis.
There will be a
difference
in memory recall
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What is the null hypothesis?
It assumes no effect of the
IV
on the
DV
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What does the null hypothesis state in the caffeine study?
No
difference
in
memory recall
between drinks
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What happens if the results show no difference?
The
null hypothesis
is accepted
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What happens if the results show a difference?
The
null hypothesis
can be rejected
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How are hypotheses for correlational investigations written?
Using
'relationship
/correlation' instead of
'difference'
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Give an example of a non-directional hypothesis for correlation.
There will be a relationship between
caffeine
and
sleep
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Give an example of a directional hypothesis for correlation.
There will be a
negative relationship
between caffeine and sleep
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What is an independent variable (IV)?
The
variable
that is
manipulated
in an
experiment
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Why is the IV important in an experiment?
To observe its effect on the
dependent variable
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Give an example of an independent variable.
Learning words in
silence
or
loud music
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What is a dependent variable (DV)?
The variable that is measured in an
experiment
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How is the DV determined in an experiment?
It depends on how the
IV
is set up
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Give an example of a dependent variable.
The
number
of items recalled from a list
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What is operationalizing variables?
Defining how
IV
and
DV
are implemented
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How is the IV operationalized in the caffeine study?
By defining
conditions
of caffeine or water
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How is the DV operationalized in the caffeine study?
By measuring
correctly
recalled items from a list
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What are extraneous variables?
Factors that affect the DV but not the
IV
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Why are extraneous variables controlled?
To prevent them from affecting the
DV
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What can happen if extraneous variables are not controlled?
They can become
confounding variables
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What are confounding variables?
Factors that
negatively
impact research findings
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What should researchers do if confounding variables are suspected?
Acknowledge them in the
discussion section
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How can confounding variables affect the DV?
They can obscure the true effect of the
IV
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What are behavioral categories used for in observations?
To record specific
observable behaviors
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Why must behavioral categories be unambiguous?
To ensure clarity in what is being
observed
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Give an example of a specific behavioral category.
Aggressive body language
(ABL)
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What is inter-observer reliability?
Consistency between two or more
observers
Ensures reliability of behavioral categories
Reduces
researcher
bias in observations
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