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Experimental Method Flashcards

(35 cards)

1
Q

What’s an aim?

A
  • 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
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2
Q

What’s a hypothesis?

A
  • 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
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3
Q

What’s a directional hypothesis?

A
  • 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
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4
Q

What’s a non-directional hypothesis?

A
  • 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
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5
Q

What’s a null hypothesis?

A
  • 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
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6
Q

When do we use a directional hypothesis?

A
  • when we have previous research to support our hypothesis
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7
Q

When do we use a non-directional hypothesis?

A
  • when there is no previous research to support either hypothesis, or the research is inconsistent
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8
Q

What’s an independent variable (IV)?

A
  • the variable that is manipulated by the researcher
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9
Q

What’s a dependent variable (DV)?

A
  • the variable that the researcher measures
  • all other variables that could potentially affect the DV should be controlled
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10
Q

What are ‘conditions’?

A
  • the different testing groups which reflect what the independent variable is
  • control condition (no energy drink/drinking water)
  • experimental condition (energy drink)
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11
Q

What’s operationalisation of variables?

A
  • clearly defining variables into measurable
  • variables are ‘operationalised’ when writing a hypothesis
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12
Q

How do you write an operationalised hypothesis?

A
  1. Directional or non-directional
  2. Operationalise your IV and DV (identify variables)
  3. Construct your hypothesis (include both conditions of the IV, and the DV, both operationalised)
  4. Write in present or future tense
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13
Q

What are extraneous variables?

A
  • any other variables that might affect the DV
  • not including the IV
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14
Q

What are confounding variables?

A
  • 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
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15
Q

What are demand characteristics?

A
  • 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
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16
Q

What are investigator effects?

A
  • when the researcher, consciously or unconsciously, influences the outcome of the experiment
  • e.g. researcher’s characteristics, researcher’s expectations, interaction with participants
17
Q

What’s randomisation?

A
  • randomly allocating participants to conditions
  • reduces bias
18
Q

What’s standardisation?

A
  • consistent use of procedures and conditions for all participants in a study
  • controlled environment and identical instructions
  • minimises effect of extraneous variables
19
Q

What are the three experimental designs?

A
  • repeated measures
  • independent groups
  • matched pairs
20
Q

Repeated Measures

A
  • participants experience both conditions
21
Q

Repeated Measures Evaluation

A

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

22
Q

Independent Groups

A
  • participants only experience one condition
23
Q

Independent Groups Evaluation

A

STRENGTHS
- no order effects
- reduced demand characteristics
- only one test needed
- less time-consuming

WEAKNESSES
- participant variables
- less economical

24
Q

Matched Pairs

A
  • 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
25
Matched Pairs Evaluation
STRENGTHS - no order effects - reduced demand characteristics - less participant variables WEAKNESSES - still some participant variables as you can't match exactly - matching is time consuming
26
What's counterbalancing?
- attempt to minimise order effects in a repeated measures design - half the participants do condition A, then B - the other half do condition B, then A
27
What's random allocation?
- used in independent groups design - participants randomly assigned to conditions using random techniques e.g. coin flip, picking names out of a hat - reduces participant variables - avoids bias - evenly distributes participant characteristics across the conditions
28
What are the four types of experiment?
- Lab - Natural - Quasi - Field
29
Lab Experiments
- highly controlled environment - investigator manipulates the IV STRENGTHS - control over extraneous variables - cause and effect (IV has affected DV) - replicable WEAKNESSES - low external validity (artificial) - low ecological validity (can’t generalise) - demand characteristics - tasks don’t represent everyday life
30
Natural Experiments
- investigator can’t manipulate the IV e.g. natural disaster STRENGTHS - high external validity WEAKNESSES - naturally occurring event reduces the opportunities for research - hard to generalise
31
Field Experiments
- everyday, natural environment - investigator still manipulates the IV STRENGTHS - more realistic setting - behaviour is more natural and authentic - high external validity WEAKNESSES - less control over extraneous variables - cause and effect is more difficult to establish - precise replication not possible - ethical issues (informed consent)
32
Quasi Experiments
- IV based on an existing difference between people e.g. age, gender - can’t manipulate IV STRENGTH - control over extraneous variables WEAKNESSES - can’t randomly allocate participants to conditions - confounding variables
33
What's a single-blind procedure?
- participant not told the aim of the study - participant not told what condition they’re in - attempt to control the effects of demand characteristics - at the end of the study, participants should receive a debrief
34
What's a double-blind procedure?
- neither the participant nor the researcher know the aim of the study - a third party conducts the investigation without knowing its main purpose - important feature of drug trials
35
What's a pilot study?
- small-scale study that takes place before the real investigation - can identify possible issues and modify the procedure