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Subdecks (1)
Research methods
Psychology
39 cards
Cards (67)
Whats an experimental hypothesis
Predicts
changes
will happen when the
independent
and
dependent
variable is
manipulated
Whats an
alternative hypothesis
A
hypothesis
that
opposes
a
null hypothesis.
Stating some kind of
relationship
between the.
variables
not down to
chance
What are operationalising variables
How you
change
/
measure
variables
What are the two types of variables in an experiment?
Independent variable
(
IV
) and
dependent variable
(
DV
)
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What does the researcher manipulate in an experiment?
The
independent variable
(IV)
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Why should
extraneous variables
remain
constant
in an
experiment
?
To ensure that the
effect
on the
DV
is
due
to the
IV alone
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What is a confounding variable?
A variable that can affect the
DV
and
confuse
the results
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What is the definition of an independent variable (IV)?
The
variable
you
‘change’
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What is the definition of a dependent variable (DV)?
The
variable
you
‘measure’
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What does operationalising variables mean?
How you will
change
/measure the
variables
Both
should be included in your
hypothesis
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What is an example of an IV and DV in the hypothesis "There will be a difference between gender and intelligence"?
IV:
Gender
; DV:
Intelligence
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How might we operationalise the IV in the hypothesis about gender and intelligence?
By stating there is a difference between
males
and
females
and
intelligence
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How might we operationalise the DV in the hypothesis about gender and intelligence?
By stating there is a difference between
males
and
females
and the number of
A grades
they achieve
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What is the hypothesis in the statement "Younger people will use Facebook more than older people"?
IV:
Age
; DV:
Facebook usage
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How might we operationalise the IV in the Facebook usage hypothesis?
By stating people aged
13-18
use Facebook more than those aged
31-50
View source
How might we operationalise the DV in the Facebook usage hypothesis?
By stating people aged
13-18
post more
comments
/photos on Facebook than those aged
31-50
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What is a directional hypothesis?
It specifies the
anticipated difference
between two
conditions
or
groups
Includes terms like
more
,
less
,
higher
,
lower
, etc.
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What is an example of a directional hypothesis?
"
Boys
will use more
swear
words than
girls
" (IV:
Gender
, DV:
Swearing
)
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What is a non-directional hypothesis?
It states that there is a
difference
between
conditions
or
groups
Does not specify the
direction
of the difference
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What is an example of a non-
directional hypothesis
?
"
There
is a
difference in
the
amount of swear words used by boys and girls
" (IV: Gender, DV: Swearing)
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What is a null hypothesis?
It states that there will be
no difference
between the
conditions
or
groups
View source
What is an example of a null hypothesis?
"
There
is
no difference in
the amount of
swear words used by
boys and
girls
" (IV: Gender, DV: Swearing)
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What is the difference between a hypothesis and an aim in research?
An aim is the
purpose
of the study
A hypothesis is a
testable
statement predicting the
outcome
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How should an aim be written?
It should start with
'To find out whether...'
or
'To investigate whether...'
and be in the
present
tense
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What is the IV in the hypothesis "Taller people will run the 100m faster than shorter people"?
Taller people
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What is the DV in the
hypothesis
"Taller people will run the 100m faster than shorter people"?
The time taken to run
the
100m
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How might we operationalise the IV in the hypothesis about height and running speed?
By stating
taller
people (
180cm
+) run the
100m
faster than
shorter
people (less than
179cm
)
View source
How might we operationalise the DV in the hypothesis about height and running speed?
By stating taller people (
180cm
+) run the
100m
in fewer seconds than shorter people (less than
179cm
)
View source
See all 67 cards
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