3.2.3.1 Scientific processes Flashcards
(97 cards)
What is an aim?
General statement of what the researcher intends to investigate
What should you always start aims with?
Always start with “TO INVESTIGATE”
What is a hypothesis?
Clear, precise, testable statement that states the relationship between the variables being investigated
When should you write a directional hypothesis?
Used when findings of previous research suggests a particular outcome
When should you write a non-directional hypothesis?
Used when there’s no previous research/previous research is contradictory
State the one-tailed formula (directional)
There will be a significant (state change i.e. increase/decrease) in (DV) for (IV 1 - one which change relates to) than (IV 2)
There will be significant increase in spelling scores out of 20 for children that eat 10g of oily fish a day than children that do not eat any oily fish a day
State the two-tailed formula (non-directional)
There will be a significant difference in (DV) between (IV 1) and (IV 2)
There will be significant difference in spelling scores out of 20 between children eat 10g of oily fish a day and children that do not eat any oily fish a day
State the null hypothesis formula
There will be no significant difference in (DV) between (IV 1) and (IV 2)
There will be no significant difference in spelling scores out of 20 for children between eat 10g of oily fish a day and children that do not eat any oily fish a day
What are variables?
Factors that can change within an investigation
Define Independent Variable
Variable that’s changed/manipulated by researcher
Define Dependent Variable
Variable that’s measured by researcher
Define Extraneous Variable
Variable that may have an effect one results of experiment BUT is not the IV
Define Operationalisation
Clearly defining variables in terms of how they can be measured
Define Standard Procedures
Way of ensuring that all participants receive same instructions & completes same tasks to have consistence in experiment
Why can cause and effect can be achieved in lab experiments?
By having one thing different = researchers can conclude that any differences in measured behaviour of participants (DV) is due to one that differs (IV)
Describe Counterbalancing
To control order effects: participants are split in half
- 1 half completes task 2 followed by task 1
- 1 half completes task 1 followed by task 2
What are order effects?
How order when participants do conditions affects the results (better or bored)
Name 2 types of extraneous variables
- Random Errors
- Constant Errors
What are random errors?
Variables that cannot be predicted
Give an example of random error
e.g. participants state of mind/mood, whether they’re ill/cold on the day
Name 2 ways we can deal with random errors
- Eliminate them by standardising = make sure all participants have same experience
- e.g. same room, same questions, same instructions
- Dealt by randomly allocating participants to experiment and control conditions = effects of errors might be balanced out
What are constant errors?
EVs that have more of an effect on one condition of experiment than other
Name an example of constant errors
Participant characteristics (e.g. personality, intelligence, gender, age)
When do constant errors occur?
When psychologists hasn’t randomised or counterbalance correctly
