Repeated measure (4)
+ what it is+what do we acess+also called+ex
In repeated measure designs, participants serve as ——— and therefore we call this approach a ——- design
Between subject design
Advantage of repeated measure design (3):
—– designs can be more appropriate if a study involves special populations, and it is harder to find members of the special population, such as children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder or students with learning disabilities.
Repeated Measure
Repeated measures have more——- then between subject
power
Unique solutions (2)
Ex:
There are some situations that people can experience only once and we cannot go bacj and create the same condition, thus we can only measure once. In these conditions it is not possible to use a repeated measures design.
For ex: In a stidy on wether gastric bypass surgery or a healthy diet would be more effect for weight loss, we need to use independent samples design as once subjects are operated on, they can no longer get back to the way they were.
Order effects (2)
+ex
Occurs when exposure to one level of the independent variable (One condition) influences the next level of the independent variable. For ex: for rating felonies and misdemeanors, if they rate the felnoes first and see the misdemeanors second, perhaps after seeing felonies, some participants will not feel so bad about misdmeanors.
Inorder to control for order effects and increase internal validity of our study, we—–
expose the participants to the conditions in different orders
4 types of order effects:
Practice effects (2)
+ex
When participants engage in experiments that employ repeated measures designs, the more people do something, the better they may become at it.
Ex: Faster reading a book the second time
Fatigue
Carryover Effecr
The effects of a preceding condition spill over into the following condition. Ex: if you take a bite from a slice of cake then drink a sip of coffee, you will not get the exact taste of your coffee as your taste buds are still under the effect of their previous experience: Sweet cake.
Sensitization Effects
Counterbalancing
2 major types of Counterbalancing:
Within Subject counterbalancing (3)
+can be achieved with….
Across subject counterbalancing
Each participant receives a subset of the condition-orders used in the experiment.
Reverse counterbalancing (2)
+ when is it less useful?
The ABBA counterbalancing technique balances practice effects only when the practice effects are —-. —— are observed if participants change————- following each condition.
Block randomization
participants receive a set of each experimental condition in random order.
Each participant would experience each level of the independent variable (A,B,C,D) six times.
Block randomization works best when
each condition appears at each position (first, second,etc) an equal number of times.
Block randomization balances practice effects only when….. For ex…..
the conditions are presented many times. For example, those many administrations of the conditions are needed to balance (average) practice effects across different conditions.
Complete counterbalancing+Ex (2)
Every possible order of your condition is administrated but each participant experience only one order. For ex: Participant 1 would get AB and participant 2 gets BA