Cards (27)

    • lab experiments are highly controlled, establishes cause and effect relationship, lacks ecological validity
    • field experiments are real world setting, higher ecological validity, less control
    • natural/quasi uses naturally occurring variables, no control over IV
    • indepedant groups have different participants in each condition, no order effects, participant variables
    • repeated measures same participants in all conditions, controls participant variables, order effects
    • matched pairs are pairs matched on key variables, reduces individual differences, time consuming
    • random sampling have an equal chance of selection, unbiased, difficult to achieve
    • opportunity sampling are first available participants, easy and biased
    • volunteer sampling is self selected, ethical and unrepresentative
    • stratified sampling is proportional, representative and time consuming
    • quantitive data is numerical, easy to analyse but lacks depth
    • qualitative data is descriptive and rich in detail but hard to analyse
    • mean uses all data but is affected by extremes
    • median is not affected by outliers but ignores some values
    • mode is useful for categories but least precise
    • range is a simple measure of spread but is affected by extremes
    • standard deviation is more precise measure of spread but harder to calculate
    • reliability is consistency of results
    • internal reliability is consistency within the study eg test refers or split half
    • external reliability is consistency over time
    • validity is the accuracy of measurement
    • internal validity is when is measures what it claims to
    • external validity can be generalised to real life (ecological, population, historical validity)
    • nominal data uses the chi squared test
    • ordinal data uses the Mann-whitney (independent) and the Wilcoxon (repeated)
    • interval data uses t-test (parametric)
    • p is less than or equal to 0.05 (results unlikely due to chance)