What is meant by a ‘dependent variable’?
The variable that the experimenter measures
What is meant by an ‘independent variable’?
The variable that the experimenter manipulates
List the research methods in experimental psychology
Laboratory Study
Field Study
Natural Experiment
Quasi Experiment
Outline and evaluate Laboratory Studies
Pros:
Cons:
Outline and evaluate Field Studies
Pros:
-Ecological validity (behaviour is more realistic)
Cons:
Outline and evaluate Natural Experiments
Pros:
Cons:
Outline and evaluate Quasi Experiments
Pros:
-Allow for comparisons between different types of people
Cons:
-Participants may be aware of being studied, ultimately affecting the internal validity
List the designs used in experimental psychology
Independent Groups Design
Repeated Measures Design
Matched Participants Design
Outline and evaluate the Independent Groups Design
-One group for each condition
Pros:
Cons:
Outline and evaluate the Repeated Measures Design
-All groups do all conditions
Pros:
Cons:
Outline and evaluate the Matched Pairs Design
-Participants are matched by similar traits (e.g. age, gender, intelligence)
Pros:
Cons:
Define ‘extraneous’ and ‘confounding’ variables
Extraneous Variables: variables other than the IV affecting the DV
Confounding Variables: if the EV is not removed, it becomes a confounding variable
Define ‘counterbalancing’?
All participants doing all conditions (ABBA)
What is meant by ‘investigator effects’?
How the investigator looks, speaks and acts. As the investigator could unintentionally convey how participants should behave
What is meant by ‘social desirability bias’?
The tendency for participants (typically in questionnaires and interviews) to answer questions in a manner which they feel will be favoured by others
What is meant by ‘face validity’?
Whether the experiment appears to test what it claims to
What is meant by ‘concurrent validity’
Comparing the outcome of a new study with the results of a similar, pre-existing study
Outline the ways to improve internal reliability
Split-half method; questions on a test are split in half. If reliable, the answers for the questions highlighted should be the same for any individual
Outline the ways to improve external reliability
Test-retest method; the ability to replicate the results of the study
Replication; the ability to replicate the results of the study with different participants
List the sampling methods used in experimental psychology
Random Sampling Opportunity Sampling Systematic Sampling Stratified Sampling Volunteer Sampling
What is meant by ‘Random Sampling’?
Each individual has an equal opportunity of being selected
What is meant by ‘Opportunity Sampling’?
Using people who are available to participate
What is meant by ‘Systematic Sampling’?
Taking every nth person from a list to create a sample
What is meant by ‘Stratified Sampling’?
Small scale reproduction of a population, and the individuals within each category are random. (e.g. if 12% of the population are black, 12% of participants in the study should be black)