what is the independent variable?
the variable that the researcher manipulates.
may be divided into levels, sometimes referred to as experimental conditions
to provide a standard against which experimental conditions can be compared there may be a control condition where the IV is not manipulated at all
what is the dependent variable?
the variable that is being measured. the IV and the DV should be operationalised.
what is operationalisation?
defining the variables in such a way as to make them measurable
what are extraneous variables?
any variables (other than the IV) that COULD affect the DV (eg. participant intelligence)
what are confounding variables?
any variables (other than the IV) that HAVE affected the DV
laboratory experiments are carried out….?
in a controlled environment, allowing the researcher to exert a high level of control over the IV and eliminate any EV. the researcher can then measure the change in the DV caused by their manipulation of the IV. participants are randomly allocated to a condition. this means neither the experimenter nor the participant decides which condition the participant is placed in, an unpredictable method is used to decide.
3 advantages of laboratory experiments?
2 disadvantages of laboratory experiments?
what is mundane realism?
the extent to which the experiment procedure reflects real life
what is ecological validity?
the ability to generalise the findings of research to the real world
field experiments are carried out…?
in the real world. the IV is manipulated by the researcher to see the effect on the DV
3 advantages of field experiments?
3 disadvantages of field experiments?
what is the sample?
people who are taking part in the experiment
In a natural experiment…?
the researcher takes advantage of a naturally occurring IV to see its effect of the DV
2 advantages of natural experiments?
2. very useful when it is impossible or unethical to manipulate the IV/sample in a laboratory or field experiment
3 disadvantages of natural experiments?
quasi experiments contain..?
a naturally occuring IV that is a difference between people that already exists (eg, gender or age). the researcher examines the effect of this variable on the DV
(has same limitations of natural)
what is an observation?
when a researcher watches or listens to participants engaging in the behaviour that is being studied
what is a non participant observation?
when the researcher does not get directly involved with the interactions of the participants.
what is a participant observation?
when the researcher is directly involved with the interactions of the participants
what is a covert observation
when the psychologist goes undercover and does not reveal their true identity, they may even give himself or herself a new identity. the group does not know that they are being observed
what is an overt observation?
the researcher watches and records the behaviour of a group that knows it is being observed by a psychologist.
observer effects can occur as participants may change their behaviour when they know they are being observed, meaning the results are not valid.
what is a naturalistic observation?
when a researcher observes participants in their own environment and there is no deliberate manipulation of the independent variable.