Experimental Method Flashcards
(35 cards)
What’s an aim?
- a general statement of what the researcher intends to investigate
- the purpose of the study
- when writing an aim, start with ‘to investigate’
- e.g. to investigate whether drinking energy drinks makes people more talkative
What’s a hypothesis?
- a clear, precise, testable statement that states the relationship between the variables being investigated
- a prediction of what the outcome will be
- written in present or future tense
- this is an experimental/alternative hypothesis
What’s a directional hypothesis?
- a one-tailed hypothesis which states which way you believe the study is going to go
- e.g. people who drink energy drinks are more talkative than people who don’t drink energy drinks
What’s a non-directional hypothesis?
- a two-tailed hypothesis which only states that there will be a difference between the two conditions
- doesn’t specify the nature of the difference
- e.g. there will be a difference in talkativeness between people who drink energy drinks and people who don’t drink energy drinks
What’s a null hypothesis?
- states that there is no difference or relationship between the two variables
- e.g. there will be no difference in talkativeness between those who drink energy drinks and those who drink water
When do we use a directional hypothesis?
- when we have previous research to support our hypothesis
When do we use a non-directional hypothesis?
- when there is no previous research to support either hypothesis, or the research is inconsistent
What’s an independent variable (IV)?
- the variable that is manipulated by the researcher
What’s a dependent variable (DV)?
- the variable that the researcher measures
- all other variables that could potentially affect the DV should be controlled
What are ‘conditions’?
- the different testing groups which reflect what the independent variable is
- control condition (no energy drink/drinking water)
- experimental condition (energy drink)
What’s operationalisation of variables?
- clearly defining variables into measurable
- variables are ‘operationalised’ when writing a hypothesis
How do you write an operationalised hypothesis?
- Directional or non-directional
- Operationalise your IV and DV (identify variables)
- Construct your hypothesis (include both conditions of the IV, and the DV, both operationalised)
- Write in present or future tense
What are extraneous variables?
- any other variables that might affect the DV
- not including the IV
What are confounding variables?
- extraneous variables that have systematically changed with the IV
- e.g. one condition containing just extroverts and the other condition containing just introverts, by chance
- personality would therefore be a confounding variable which could explain changes in the DV
What are demand characteristics?
- type of extraneous variable
- subtle cues within a study that could possibly reveal the purpose of the study to participants
- may lead to the participant changing their behaviour (please you/screw you effect)
- behaviour is no longer natural
What are investigator effects?
- when the researcher, consciously or unconsciously, influences the outcome of the experiment
- e.g. researcher’s characteristics, researcher’s expectations, interaction with participants
What’s randomisation?
- randomly allocating participants to conditions
- reduces bias
What’s standardisation?
- consistent use of procedures and conditions for all participants in a study
- controlled environment and identical instructions
- minimises effect of extraneous variables
What are the three experimental designs?
- repeated measures
- independent groups
- matched pairs
Repeated Measures
- participants experience both conditions
Repeated Measures Evaluation
STRENGTHS
- reduced participant variables (individual differences)
- requires less participants so more economical
- more direct comparisons
WEAKNESSES
- order effects
- demand characteristics
- more than one test needed
Independent Groups
- participants only experience one condition
Independent Groups Evaluation
STRENGTHS
- no order effects
- reduced demand characteristics
- only one test needed
- less time-consuming
WEAKNESSES
- participant variables
- less economical
Matched Pairs
- pairs of participants matched in terms of key characteristics e.g. IQ, age
- one member of each pair placed into experimental group, other placed in control group