Lecture 3 - Participants Flashcards

1
Q

What do we need to do when recruiting to ensure results apply to people other than those recruited (results are generalisable).

A
  • recruit people from the population we want to investigate (i.e. should be representative of population)
  • recuirt a sufficient number of participants
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2
Q

What is the ideal way of sampling a population to get your participants?

A

Choosing randomly from population.

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3
Q

What happens in practice when getting participants?

A

Conveniance sampling

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4
Q

How many people should we recruit?

A

More is better typically , however it needs to be a feasible number.

We need to consider practical (time to recruit , population difficult to access) and ethical considerations (study puts burden on participants , delays).

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5
Q

What is central theorem?

A

As sample size increase to >= 30 the data becomes approximately normally distributed.

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6
Q

What does the central limit tell us?

A

This means that, if you are measuring abilities that are normally
distributed in general population (e.g. typing accuracy on a task)
then after around 30 people are recruited this will be reflected in
the data.

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7
Q

What is a within-subject?

A

participants do all tasks (all levels) , so we can compare across all

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8
Q

What is a between-subject?

A

A participant that is part of a group completing only a subset of all tasks. We compare performance acorss groups.

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9
Q

Which type of a subject is favoured?

A

The within-subject.

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10
Q

left on order effects

A
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