Experiment
Experimental Designs
Observations/Case Study
Experimental Controls/Correlations
Self-Reports
100
The number of experiment types.
What is three?
100
The number of experimental designs.
What is three?
100
The number of types of observation.
What is three?
200
The types of experiment.
What is laboratory, natural, and field.
200
The types of experimental design.
What is repeated measures, independent groups, and matched pairs?
200
The definition of the term "case study".
What is research that involves a detailed description of a particular individual or group under study or treatment?
300
Two advantages of laboratory experiments.
What is: - Able to see cause and effect while manipulating a variable - Control over extraneous variables - Ease of replication due to standardized procedure - Consent usually given; reduces ethical issues
300
This is what is meant by the repeated measures.
What is a design where each participant takes part in both or more conditions of the IV?
300
The types of observation.
What is controlled observation, natural observation, and participant observation?
400
This is the difference between field and natural experiments.
What is: field experiments take place outside of a lab, where conditions (IV) are controlled, while natural experiments happen when the conditions are naturally occurring (happening by themselves) and ARE NOT manipulated.
400
Controlled observation would most likely take place here.
What is a lab(oratory)?
500
Example of a natural experiment AND WHY.
What is Baron-Cohen, because the AS/HFA condition is naturally pre-existing, or What is Billington, because the students were already either male or female and in science or humanities - no manipulation done by the experimenters.
500
Give two examples of a naturalistic observation, and two examples of a case study.
What is: Naturalistic observation: Pilivan Case Study: Freud, Thigpen and Cleckley
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