Methods Flashcards

1
Q

hindsight bias

A

the tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that you knew this info prior

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2
Q

overconfidence

A

humans tend to think they know more than they do

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3
Q

theory vs hypothesis

A

theory- a proven explanation of organized principles
hypothesis- a testable prediction that has not been completely proven

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4
Q

operational definition

A

a report of all procedures to specifically define your experiment’s variables

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5
Q

population

A

the participants in the group being studied

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6
Q

random sample

A

a sample of the population that can unbiasedly and equally report results

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7
Q

correlation

A

a measure of how much one factor predicts another

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8
Q

correlation coefficient

A

a statistical index of the relationship between things on a scale between -1 to +1.
positive=increasexincrease w/ high correlation
negative=increasexdecrease w/ high correlation
zero= no correlation

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9
Q

illusory correlations

A

perceived but nonexistent correlations (we notice coincidences more often) between vivid cases

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10
Q

experiment

A

a way to research the effects of an independent variable on a dependent variable

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11
Q

random assignment

A

assigning participants to experimental and control group by chance

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12
Q

double blind procedure

A

neither the participants nor staff know whether participants have received treatment or placebo- corrects volunteer and experimenter bias

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13
Q

placebo effect

A

experimental results caused by expectations alone

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14
Q

measures of central tendency

A

mean, median, mode

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15
Q

measures of variation

A

range and standard deviation

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16
Q

false consensus

A

incorrectly believing everyone agrees with your own opinions

17
Q

hawthorn effect

A

people change the way they act in the experiment because they know they are being watched

18
Q

single blind procedure

A

participants don’t know which group they’re in- corrects participant/volunteer bias

19
Q

informed consent

A

people have a right to know they are being studied and what it is

20
Q

deception

A

not clarifying an aspect of an experiment
in order to do this you need special permission from the psych committee (IRB)

21
Q

debrief

A

after experiment interview to assess participant wellbeing

22
Q

stratified sampling

A

instead of random sampling, you sample a percentage that is proportionate to the population

23
Q

third variable problem

A

two things appear correlated but there is a third variable that correlates with both

24
Q

case studies

A

observing to discover more about universal principles based on one person/small group
can study unique things
can’t generalize

25
Q

surveys

A

asking a group for their attitudes/beliefs directly, based on self reports
provides large random samples BUT sampling errors common (wording+lying)

26
Q

naturalistic observation

A

experimenter observes and records behavior without interfering/manipulating the situation
provides insight on natural conditions BUT cannot manipulate variables so does not fully explain behaviors

27
Q

longitudinal studies

A

measuring the same group of time
time=IV
developmental research
better prediction of changes BUT takes time and group gets smaller

28
Q

cross sectional studies

A

measuring different groups to compare
pre-determined IV (not manipulated)
takes less time BUT may not be accurate due to cohort effect

29
Q

testing

A

standardized questions normed against a large group
compares individual to a population

30
Q

scatterplot

A

plot two measured variables against each other
no IV, two DV
can help with prediction BUT not causation

31
Q

laboratory observation

A

experimenter changes the IV and randomly assigns to conditions of IV to measure DV
determines causation BUT artificial environment; Hawthorn Effect

32
Q

confidentiality

A

participant information is not released without consent

33
Q

validity vs reliability

A

Reliability refers to the consistency of a measure (whether the results can be reproduced under the same conditions). Validity refers to the accuracy of a measure (whether the results really do represent what they are supposed to measure).