Research methods - paper 2

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What is the economy

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What is the economy

the state of a country or region in terms of the production and consumption of goods and services

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Implications for the economy

Employment, health, crime

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How to stop employment being an implication for the economy

Whether woman work (replacement carers needed) Reducing sick days

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How to stop health being an implement for the economy

Reduction in NHS costs as people are treated effectively Treating addiction

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How to stop crime being an implication for the economy

Reduction in criminal justice bill (costs for policing courts and custodial sentencing) Lower losses due to crime for the population

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What are the methods to carry out psychological research

Experiments Observations Self report Correlations Content analysis Case studies

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How are experiments used as a research method

By manipulating the independent variable (IV) and measuring the dependent variable (DV) we can show cause and effect

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What is the independent variable in an experiment

the variable that is changed to see if it affects the outcome of the experiment

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What is the DV

The variable you measure and don't control in any way

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What is the extraneous variable?

variable which may affect your study other than the IV that might affect the results

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Example of the extraneous variable

Noise, temperature, busyness of street

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What is the confounding variable

Any variable, other than the IV, that may have affected the DV (results), it also varies with the IV

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What is an example of the confounding variable

Everyone having the same driving experience when experimenting driving skill

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What does it mean to operationalise

To specify behaviours that can be measured and manipulated

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What is an example of operationalising

Before: putting lavender oil on pillow will help you sleep After: putting 5ml of lavender oil on your pillow will help you sleep in a laboratory

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What is a hypothesis?

A clear, precise, testable statement that states the relationship between the variables to be investigated at the outset of any experiment or correctional study

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What do experimental hypothesis predict

There will be a difference between the two conditions of the IV on whatever is being measured

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What is a non directional hypothesis

The direction is not predicted so the groups will differ

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What is a directional hypothesis

Predicts the expected direction of the result - only used if previous research shows the likely outcome so one group will do better

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Example of a directional hypothesis

More people will prefer the taste of the pink lollipop rather than the blue

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Example of a non-directional hypothesis

There will be a difference between the pink and blue lollipops in how much they like the taste

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What are the different types of experimental methods

Laboratory Field Natural Quasi

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What is a true experiment

The IV is manipulated to change the DV

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What is a laboratory experiment

The researcher manipulates the IV and records the effect of the DV whilst controlling extraneous variables

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What is a field experiment?

An experiment where the IV is still manipulated but it is carried out in the field (real life place)

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What is a natural experiment

An experiment where the difference in the IV would have happened even if the researcher hadn't been there - something had changed but maybe not deliberately and certainly not by the researcher

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What is a quasi experiment

Where the IV is not manipulated, it is something the person just is and cannot be manipulated or changed by the experiment or anyone else

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Laboratory experiments strengths

Can show cause and effect Created an accurate measurement due to the control Can be replicated easily

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Laboratory experiments weaknesses

Very low similarity to real life situations Tasks are artificial Aware of being studied due to artificial settings Total control of all variables is never possible

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Field experiment strengths

High similarity to real life so more likely to act natural Can show cause and effect In real life environments participants may be unaware they are being studied so won't act differently

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Field experiment weaknesses

Less control over extraneous variables Participants don't always know they are taking part - may be unethical Harder to replicate as the environment is harder to control

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Natural experiments strengths

Ethical because nothing is manipulated Practical More applicable to real life as there is a naturally occurring IV

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Natural experiment weaknesses

Can't show cause and effect as the researcher hasn't effected the IV Less control over extraneous variables

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Quasi experiment strengths

Ethical as nothing is manipulated Practical as false environments aren't needed More applicable to real life Normally in controlled environments

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Quasi experiment weaknesses

Can't show cause and effect as the IV hasn't been manipulated Less control over extraneous variables

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What is a participant variable

Anything that may vary between participants that may affect the DV

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What is a situational variable

Anything in the research situation that may affect the DV

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What are experimental designs?

designs involving random assignment to groups and manipulation of the independent variable

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What are the experimental designs

Independent group design Repeated measures design Matched pairs design

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What is the independent group design

Using different participants for each condition - participants only take part in one condition It is randomly allocating participants to groups

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What is the repeated measures design

Where the same participants are used for both conditions in the experiment

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What is the matched pairs design

When different but matched participants are used in the experiment - the pairs take part in different conditions

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What is the procedure for matched pairs

  1. select appropriate variable to match pairs on

  2. measure each participants ability and give them a score

  3. put participants into pairs with someone with a similar score

  4. randomly allocate each participants to each condition

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What are demand characteristics

When participants alter their behaviour because they believe they know the purpose of the investigation.

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How can demand characteristics be reduced

Deception - participants are unaware of the aim of the study or the conditions are it's called a 'double blind'

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What is the investigator effect

Conscious or unconscious Any behaviour of the researcher that may inadvertently affect the study including interaction with the participants

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Example of investigator effect

Selection of participants Asking leading questions Bias and interpretation of results

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How to control the investigator effect

Randomly allocating participants to conditions Randomly order questions on questionnaire Conduct a 'double blind' study where neither participants nor the researcher is aware of the aim or which the conditions the participants are in

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When do the order effects occur

In repeated measures design and it is controlled by counterbalancing

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What design is counterbalancing for

Repeated measures design

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What design is standardisation used in

All designs

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What is a target population?

The whole group you are studying

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What is a sample

Those taking part in the research. It should be representative of the population as a whole

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What is a participant

An individual in a sample

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What is opportunity sampling

The researcher takes whoever is easily available to use as a participant

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What is a volunteer sample

Asking people to volunteer - individuals determine their own involvement in the stufy

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What is random sampling

Every member of the target population has and equal chance at being picked as it is randomised

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What is systematic sampling

A sampling frame is produced which has the name of participants in an order - every nth person is picked

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What is stratified sampling

Dividing the population into subgroups then selecting a sample from each of these groups

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What are the two key ideas of sampling methods

Representativeness and generalisation

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What are the sampling methods

Opportunity Volunteer Random Systematic Stratified

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What is representiveness

This means the sample selected represents the overall target population

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What is generalisation

When a sample is representative of a target population we can then generalise those results and conclusions to the whole target population

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Strengths of opportunity sampling

Sample is required quickly so the study can take place quickly Sample can be acquired cheaply

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Weaknesses of opportunity sampling

Participants might not represent the sample There may be a research bias Sample is limited to the location it was taken from May get people who don't work or are unemployed Gives illusion of being drawn from a large population

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Strengths of volunteer sampling

Participants should have given informed consent Participants may be less likely to withdraw from the study as they chose to take part

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Weaknesses of volunteer sampling

May be more biased May be difficult to obtain large numbers due to advertisement

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Strengths or random sampling

Avoids researcher bias as every has a chance of being picked Very representative sampling method

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Weaknesses of random sampling

Almost impossible to carry out effectively unless it's a small target population May obtain an unrepresentative sample May have a biased sample

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Strengths of systematic sampling

Avoids researcher bias as the researcher has no control over who takes part Fairly representative method

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Weaknesses of systematic sampling

May be unrepresentative May end up being biased

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Strengths of stratified sampling

Equal representation of subgroups Participants are randomly selected

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Weaknesses of stratified sampling

Not all sun groups are representative May end up being biased

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what is the difference between naturalistic and controlled experiments

Naturalistic observation is a type of observational study where participants' spontaneous behaviour is recorded in their own environment. Controlled observation is a type of observational study where the conditions are contrived by the researcher.

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what is the difference between covert and overt experiments

Overt Observation - this is where the group being studied know they are being observed. Covert Observation - this where the group being studied does not know they are being observed, or where the research goes 'undercover'

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what is the difference between participant and non participant experiments

in a participant experiment the investigator joins in with the group being studied, in a non participant experiment the investigator just observes the study

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how to measure mean

adding up the scores and dividing the total by the number of scores

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how to measure mode

put the numbers in order from least to greatest and count how many times each number occurs

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how to measure median

put all numbers into ascending order and work into the middle by crossing off numbers at each end

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how to measure range

first put all the numbers in order. Then subtract (take away) the lowest number from the highest.

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how to measure percentage

dividing the value by the total value, and then multiplying the result by 100

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what is the difference between aims and hypothesis

A hypothesis is a proposed explanation of something that has to be verified and tested before it can be widely accepted as fact while aim is the goal or the purpose of the process

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what is the difference between population and sample

A population is the entire group that you want to draw conclusions about. A sample is the specific group that you will collect data from

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what are behavioural categories in psychology

when psychologists must decide which specific behaviours should be examined. This involves breaking the target behaviour (e.g. aggression) into components that can be observed and measured

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what is event sampling

a strategy commonly used in direct observation that involves noting and recording the occurrence of a carefully specified behavior whenever it is seen

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what is time sampling

a data collection strategy that involves noting and recording the occurrence of a target behavior whenever it is seen during a stated time interval.

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key words for reliability

consistency, objective, standardised, test - retest, inter-observer reliability

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reliability definition

results should be consistent (the same) from one occasion to another (when repeated) - the same answer should always be found

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what is a way to test reliability

test retest inter observer reliability

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what is test retest

participants do the same measure on different occasions - high correlation (+.8)

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What is inter-observer reliability?

The extent to which there is agreement between two or more observers involved in observations of a behaviour. should be a positive correlation of (+.8)

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what does subjectivity do to reliability and why

it reduces reliability as it is one persons opinion on the matter

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what does objective measures do to reliability and why

improves reliability as someone doesnt give their own opinion they look at the facts

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what does standardised methods and task do to reliability and why

improves reliability as all tasks and conditions are kept the same for all participants (is the IV affecting the DV)

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What is internal validity?

is the experiment measuring what was intended

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What is face validity?

is what was intended being measured

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What is concurrent validity?

whether a new test results are the same as an established test of known validity

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What is ecological validity?

whether findings can be generalised into the real world

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what is temporal validity

whether results can be generalised from one time period to another

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