Three Claims, Four Validities
Ethical Research
Measurement & Reliability
Bivariate Correlations
Sources of Knowledge
100

The process of turning a conceptual variable into something measurable is called this.

What is operationalization

100

Name the infamous study that tested obedience to authority by instructing participants to administer what they believed were painful electric shocks to others.

What is the Milgram Experiment?

100

A measurement scale that categorizes variables without a meaningful numerical difference.

What is a nominal scale?

100

The range of values for a correlation coefficient.

What is -1 to +1?

100

Unlike intuition and personal experience, research is based on systematic observation and this key principle, which reduces bias and increases accuracy.

What is empirical evidence?

200

The type of claim that states one variable is responsible for changes in another.


What is a causal claim?

200

This ethical principle ensures that participants have all necessary information before agreeing to be in a study.

What is informed consent?

200

The extent to which a measure produces consistent results over time.

What is reliability?

200

The reason correlation does not imply causation.

What are third variables, temporal precedence, and lack of experimental control?

200

A hypothesis that is based on existing theories rather than direct observations is called this

What is a theory-driven hypothesis?

300

This validity ensures that a study’s results can be generalized beyond the sample used.

What is external validity?

300

The three ethical principles outlined in the Belmont Report.

What are respect for persons, beneficence, and justice?

300

The extent to which a test actually measures what it claims to measure.

What is validity?

300

A factor that can change the strength or direction of a correlation.

What is moderation?

300

This type of research question seeks to establish how variables relate to one another but does not imply causation.

What is an association claim?

400

This type of claim is used to describe how common something is within a population.

What is a frequency claim?

400

This organization oversees research studies to ensure they meet ethical standards.

What is the Institutional Review Board (IRB)?

400

This type of reliability assesses whether different raters give consistent scores.

What is inter-rater reliability?

400

This statistical issue occurs when the full range of data is not represented, potentially weakening correlations.

What is range restriction?

400

This type of reasoning starts with a general theory or principle and applies it to specifc cases to make predictions.

What is deductive reasoning?

500

This validity assesses whether a study truly establishes cause-and-effect by eliminating confounding variables.

What is internal validity?

500

This unethical study failed to inform participants they were infected with syphilis and withheld treatment from them.

What is the Tuskegee Syphilis Study?

500

The extent to which a measure correlates with an outcome it should theoretically predict.

What is criterion validity?

500

This statistical issue occurs when extreme data points disproportionately influence the strength and direction of a correlation.

What is an outlier?

500

This cognitive shortcut can make people rely on the most easily recalled information rather than actual data

What is the availability heuristic?

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