Research Methods Flashcards

1
Q

What’s a Null hypothesis

A

One that is based on the assumption that there is no difference between two conditions or no relationship between two variables

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2
Q

What’s a directional hypothesis (one tailed)

A

A prediction that states the direction of the difference between two conditions or which states the direction of any correlation between two variables

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3
Q

What’s a non-directional hypothesis (two tailed)

A

A prediction which states that there will be no difference between conditions or that there will be a correlation but which does not state a direction the difference will go in

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4
Q

What is the independent variable?

A

The variable that you change, which CAUSES the effect or outcome

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5
Q

What’s the dependant variable?

A

The variable that we measure which is the outcome of effect of the study.

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6
Q

What’s an alternative hypothesis?

A

One that States that there is a significant difference between two conditions of a significant relationship between two variables

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7
Q

Extraneous variable?

A

Any variable that may affect the dependant variable apart from the IV

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8
Q

What is operationalising a variable?

A

Means to make something clear so that it’s easier and more accurate to measure and makes reproducibility better

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9
Q

What are the experimental designs?

A
  • Independent groups
  • repeated measures
  • matched pairs
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10
Q

Explain independent groups and it’s benefits and weaknesses

A

Different participants in each condition of the IV.
Strength- people only do one IV so there is no chance of learning/improvement (practice effects), there’s also no fatigue effects.
Weaknesses- there are participant variables as there’s different people doing each IV.
- usually needs more participants so is practically difficult

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11
Q

Explain repeated measures design and the strengths and weaknesses

A

Each participant does both conditions of the IV.
STRENTHS- it controls participant variables as both sets of participants do both conditions.
-requires fewer people
WEAKNESSES- it takes longer for each participant to complete it as the do it twice.
- there may be order effects including practice effects or fatigue.

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12
Q

Explain Matched pairs Design and its strengths and weaknesses.

A

Each person only does one condition of the IV, but are matched with another person doing the other condition on some important extraneous variable (e.g. IQ).
STRENGTHS- there are no problems with order effects
- the research gains control over extraneous variables
WEAKNESSES- the main weakness is that is can be impractical to match people at the beginning of the experiment.
- there are other participant variables that researchers cannot match participants on.

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13
Q

What is counterbalancing in repeated measures design?

A

Half the participants do conditions in one particular order and the other half do the conditions in the opposite order- this is done to balance possible order effects.

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14
Q

What are the different experimental methods?

A
  • laboratory
  • field
  • natural And quasi experiments
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15
Q

Lab experiment

A

Conducted in a controlled environment.
Participants are aware they’re taking part in an experiment but may not know the aim.
Poor ecological validity.

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16
Q

Field experiment

A

Conducted in real world environments e.g. A hospital ward.

Less likely that participants know they’re in an experiment and there is less control over extraneous variables.

17
Q

Natural experiment

A

Where the IV has not been manipulated by the experimenter, but has changed or occurred naturally (the terrorist attacks on 9/11 gave a natural opportunity to study the effects on pregnant women. They’re unplanned.

18
Q

Quasi experiment

A

The independent variable has not been manipulated but the experimenter has still carefully planned it. The most common type of experiment is where researchers investigate the differences between men and women on a certain variable.

19
Q

What is quantitative data

A

Information from an experiment that is gathers in the form of numbers

20
Q

What are demand characteristics

A

The features of a study that may bias the participants to behave in a certain way as they may guess the purpose of the study and change their behaviour (screw you effect)

21
Q

Define reliability

A

Extent to which findings of measures have been repeated with similar results of the extent to which a measure is consistent.
Reliability=consistency

22
Q

Types of reliability

A

Inter-rater reliability - more than one researcher agrees with one another’s results.
Test-retest reliability - the test is done again on the same sample of participants. Looking for a high correlation between results

23
Q

Replicability?

A

The ability to repeat a study over and over in exactly the same way.

24
Q

Define validity

A

Results that are accurate and true. Accurately investigates what it intends to.

25
Q

Types of validity

A

Ecological validity- we can generalise it to real life
Temporal validity- we can generalise it to several years ago.
Concurrent validity- assessing validity by comparing the results with another relevant measure. See if there’s a correlation between two things.

26
Q

Types of data

A

Primary data- your own data
Secondary data- someone else’s data
Meta Analysis- a collection of lots of different pieces of data from different experimenters and researchers,

27
Q

Time sampling

A

In this the observer will record everything that is happening in the individual or group for a particular period of time. E.g. Every 30 seconds they’ll record what is happening

28
Q

Qualitative data

A

Data recorded in non-numerical form.