What is a laboratory experiment?
The IV is manipulated by the researcher and the experiment is carried out in a laboratory or other contrived setting away from the participants’ normal environment.
What are the strengths of laboratory experiments?
What are the weaknesses of laboratory experiments?
What is a field experiment?
The IV is manipulated by the researcher but this time the experiment is carried out using participants in their normal surroundings.
What are the strengths of field experiments?
What are the weaknesses of field experiments?
What is a quasi experiment?
The IV is naturally occurring (e.g. cloudy conditions versus sunny conditions), not manipulated by the researcher.
What are the strengths of quasi experiments?
What are the weaknesses of quasi experiments?
What is the repeated measures design?
Involves using the same people in each condition.
What are the strengths of using a repeated measures design?
What are the weaknesses of using a repeated measures design?
What is the independent measures design?
Involves using different people in each condition.
What are the strengths of using an independent measures design?
What are the weaknesses of using an independent measures design?
What is the matched participants design?
Involves using different people in each condition but an attempt is made to make participants as similar as possible on certain key characteristics (any that might influence findings). This is done by testing the individuals on the key characteristics, pairing them based on similar scores, and then placing one member of each pair into each group.
What are the strengths of using an matched participants design?
What are the weaknesses of using a matched participants design?
What are controls?
What are order effects?
If doing the same activity twice, participants may do better the second time due to practice or worse due to fatigue or boredom.
What is counter-balancing?
What are demand characteristics?
Cues in an experiment that communicate to participants what is expected of them and which may unconsciously affect the behaviour of participants.
What are researcher effects?
Describes how results could be affected by a researcher’s behaviour e.g. the researcher may be more encouraging in the experimental condition which could explain the participants’ increased performance rather than the IV being responsible.
What is a single blind?
When the participants do not know the aim of the study.