types of experiments

Cards (55)

  • What is the primary purpose of an experiment?
    To observe the effect of the IV on the DV
  • What distinguishes a lab experiment from other types of experiments?
    Maximum control and a contrived setting
  • What is a field experiment?
    An experiment conducted in a natural setting with less control
  • Why might a field experiment have higher ecological validity than a lab experiment?
    Because it is conducted in a natural setting
  • What is a natural experiment?
    An experiment where the IV changes without the experimenter's intervention
  • What is a key disadvantage of natural experiments?
    Less control of extraneous variables
  • What is a quasi-experiment?
    An experiment where the IV is based on an existing difference between participants
  • What is a key advantage of quasi-experiments?
    Less experimenter bias in group allocation
  • What are demand characteristics?
    Participants changing behavior to help or spoil the study
  • How do demand characteristics affect the validity of an experiment?
    They lower validity by making the data inaccurate
  • What is investigator bias?
    When the researcher influences participants' behavior or data
  • How does investigator bias affect the validity of an experiment?
    It lowers validity by making the data inaccurate
  • What is ecological validity?
    How reflective of real life the study setting is
  • Why is ecological validity important in experiments?
    It determines if findings can be generalized to real life
  • What are the four main types of experiments?
    Laboratory, field, natural, and quasi
  • What is a key advantage of lab experiments?
    High control of extraneous variables
  • What is a key disadvantage of lab experiments?
    Lacks ecological validity
  • What is a key advantage of field experiments?
    High ecological validity
  • What is a key disadvantage of field experiments?
    Less control of extraneous variables
  • What is a key advantage of natural experiments?
    Increased ecological validity
  • What is a key disadvantage of natural experiments?
    Less control of extraneous variables
  • What is a key advantage of quasi-experiments?
    Less experimenter bias in group allocation
  • What is a key disadvantage of quasi-experiments?
    More chance of extraneous variables
  • What are extraneous variables?
    Variables other than the IV that could affect the DV
  • How do extraneous variables affect the validity of an experiment?
    They can confound the results, lowering validity
  • What are participant variables?
    Differences between participants that could affect the DV
  • How do participant variables affect the validity of an experiment?
    They can confound the results, lowering validity
  • What are situational variables?
    Aspects of the environment that could affect the DV
  • How do situational variables affect the validity of an experiment?
    They can confound the results, lowering validity
  • What is internal validity?
    Whether the experiment tests what it is supposed to
  • How does internal validity affect the quality of an experiment?
    High internal validity means the experiment is accurate
  • What is external validity?
    Whether the findings can be generalized to other settings
  • How does external validity affect the quality of an experiment?
    High external validity means findings are generalizable
  • If a researcher wants to study the effect of noise on memory in a controlled environment, which type of experiment should they use?
    Lab experiment
  • If a researcher wants to study the effect of socioeconomic status on health without manipulating the IV, which type of experiment should they use?
    Natural experiment
  • If a researcher wants to study the effect of gender on superstition without manipulating the IV, which type of experiment should they use?
    Quasi-experiment
  • How does the control of extraneous variables differ between lab and field experiments?
    Lab experiments have high control, field experiments have less control
  • How does the ecological validity of lab experiments compare to field experiments?
    Lab experiments have lower ecological validity than field experiments
  • How does the ability to establish cause-and-effect relationships differ between natural and lab experiments?
    Lab experiments can establish cause-and-effect, natural experiments cannot
  • How does the likelihood of demand characteristics differ between lab and field experiments?
    Lab experiments are more likely to have demand characteristics