What’s an experimental method
Where you measure one variable (dependent) by manipulating the other variable (independent) while the other variables are held constant
What’s an independent variable
The variable you manipulate
What’s the dependent variable
The variable you measure
What’s operationalising
Turning psychological variables into measurable ones
What’s extraneous variables
Variables other than the independent variable that may have an effect on the dependent variable
If not controlled, they become confounding variables
What’s a confounding variable
Uncontrolled extraneous variables that negatively effect the results
The research cycle
What are the 4 different types of experiments
Laboratory experiment
Field experiment
Natural experiment
Quasi experiment
Describe a laboratory experiment
Advantages and disadvantages of a lab experiment
Advantages= -Can control variables (no extraneous variables)
-No extraneous variables= Clear cause and effect
Disadvantages= -Difficulty generalising these results to real life
-Unnatural- People may act different (demand characteristics)
Describe a field experiment
Advantages and disadvantages of a field experiment
Advantages= - Natural environment, therefore reduce demand characteristics
- Behaviour is easy to generalise as participants are unaware they’re being studied (no demand characteristics)
Disadvantages= -Harder to replicate
-More difficult to establish cause and effect because cannot control extraneous variables
Describe a natural experiment
Advantages and disadvantages of a natural experiment
Advantages= -High in ecological validity as IV is naturally occurring
- Ethical as there’s no harm to participants caused by Researcher
Disadvantages= Researcher has no control over variables, therefore may be difficult to measure cause and effect
Describe a Quasi experiment
Advantages and disadvantages of a quasi experiment
Advantages= -Researcher can have control over the design of the study and other extraneous variable— experiment can take place in a laboratory for example. Therefore, can measure cause and effect easier
Disadvantages= -Sample bias- cannot randomly allocate participants to conditions, so other variables may have an effect. Reducing validity
Examples of non-experimental methods
Observational studies involve what
Watching and recording people’s behaviour
What are the two observational techniques
- Controlled
What’s the naturalistic observational technique
What’s the controlled observational technique
What’s Participant observations
Observations made by someone who is also participating in the activity being observed
What’s non-Participant observations
The observer is separate from the people being observed
What’s a covert observation
Observing people without their knowledge