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Chloe
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Cards (237)
What is an experiment?
study of cause and
effect
where a variable is manipulated to see its
effect
on another variable
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How are laboratory experiments conducted?
in an
artificial environment
where the
independent variable
is manipulated and there is careful control over extraneous variables
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What are 3 strengths of a lab
experiment
?
control over extraneous variables
replicable
/
reliable
cause and effect- valid
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What are 2 weaknesses of a lab experiment?
low
EV
prone to
demand characteristics
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What is a
field
experiment?
controlled experiment
in a
natural environment
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What are 2 strengths of field experiments?
high EV
demand characteristics
minimised
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What are 3 weaknesses of field experiments?
low
control over variables
difficult to
replicate
difficult to
record
data
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What is a
quasi
experiment?
where the
independent
variable is naturally occurring so doesn't need to be
manipulated
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What are 3 strengths of quasi experiments?
naturally
occurring IV- can study things that cannot be manipulated
high
control
cause
and
effect
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What are 3 weaknesses of quasi experiments?
low in
EV
not
replicable
sometimes
demand characteristics
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What are the types of observation?
participant
non-participant
structure
unstructured
controlled
overt
covert
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What are strengths of observation?
shows
real behaviour
can capture
spontaneous
and
real behaviour
high in
EV
often
pre-determined
coding systems makes data easy to
collect
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What are weaknesses of observation?
observer bias
if behavioural checklists aren't designed well can cause low
inter-rater reliability
ethical
concerns if
covert
demand characteristics
if overt
cannot provide information on what people
think
or
feel
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What are 2 methods of self-report?
interview
questionnaire
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What are the different types of interview?
structured
semi-structured
unstructured
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What are the strengths of self-report?
large
amount of data can be collected quickly- more
generalisable
questionnaires/structured interviews
replicable
unstructured can gather in depth
data
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What are the weaknesses of self-report?
questionnaires/structured interviews lack
flexibility
unstructured
impossible to replicate
demand characteristics
influence responses
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What is correlation?
show whether there is an association between two variables- no
manipulation
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What are the three types of correlation?
positive
negative
zero
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What are the strengths of correlation?
quantifiable
measures used
information about the
relationship
of
variables
can be the
basis
for further
experimental
research
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What are the weaknesses of correlation?
cause
and
effect
not established
findings may be
misleading
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What is the difference between a one-tailed and two-tailed hypothesis?
one-tailed is
directional
so predicts the effect of the IV on the DV but two-tailed is
non-directional
so doesn't stay the direction the results will go in
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What is random sampling?
each member of the target population has an
equal
chance of being selected
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What is
snowball
sampling?
initial participants recruiting other participants
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What is opportunity sampling?
selecting
people who are
available
at the time
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What is
self-selected
sampling?
asking people to
volunteer
to take part
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What is
repeated measures
design?
each participant is tested in each condition
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What is a strength of repeated measures?
fewer
participants needed
individual
differences controlled
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What is a weakness of repeated measures?
order effects
(e.g. boredom or practice effects)
change behaviour
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What is independent measures
design
?
different participants used for each condition of the
IV
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What is a strength of independent measures?
no order effects influencing behaviour
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What is a weakness of independent measures?
more
participants
needed
individual
differences
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What is matched participants design?
participants matched based on
similar
characteristics and each one does a
different
condition
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What is a strength of matched
participants
?
matched
on
features
important to the study so individual differences won't have an influence
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What is a weakness of matched participants?
matching process is
difficult
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What are the
IV
and
DV
?
Independent Variable-
what is
manipulated
Dependent Variable-
what is
measured
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What are behavioural categories?
method of
breaking down continuous
behaviour into
recordable
event
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What are coding frames?
lists of
behavioural
categories to break down
continuous
behaviour
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What is the difference between time and event sampling?
time sampling- recording behaviours at
regular
intervals
event sampling- recording behaviours as each one
occurs
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What is the difference between open and closed questions?
open questions- participants can give fully detailed answers in their own words-
qualitative
closed questions- where participants must choose from set answers-
quantitative
data
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