Causation & Research Design
Experiments
Survey Research
Secondary Data Analysis & General Concepts
Quantitative Methods
100

What three criteria are required to establish causation?

Association, time order, and nonspuriousness.

100

What are the three core components of a true experiment?

Random assignment, control group, treatment, pre/post measurement.

100

What is a strength of survey research?

Low cost, large samples, generalizability.

100

What is reliability?

Consistency of measurement.

100

What is the difference between descriptive and inferential statistics?

Descriptive statistics summarize the data you have (they stay home with the sample), while inferential statistics test hypotheses and make predictions or generalizations beyond the sample.

200

What is a spurious relationship?

A false association caused by a third variable.

200

Why is random assignment essential?

It ensures that the treatment and control groups are equivalent at the start.

200

What is a major weakness of survey research?

Measurement error/low validity, low depth, self-report bias.

200

What is validity?

Accuracy — measuring what it's intended to measure.

200

When is the median preferred over the mode?

When data are skewed or contain outliers, because the median better represents the center.

300

Which longitudinal design follows the exact same participants over time, unlike cohort or repeated cross-sectional designs?

Panel design

300

What is the difference between a treatment and a control group?

Treatment receives the intervention; control does not.

300

What is an omnibus survey?

A survey covering many unrelated topics.

300

What is the difference between primary and secondary data?

Primary data is collected firsthand by the researcher; secondary data was collected by someone else for another purpose.

300

What does it mean when a distribution is skewed? What does the curve look like?

Values cluster on one side with a long tail.

400

Which explanation aims for broad, generalizable causal laws, and which focuses on unique individual circumstances?

Nomothetic = broad/generalizable; Idiographic = case-specific/deep detail.

400

What type of experiment was the domestic violence arrest study in Bachman & Schutt?

A quasi-experiment or field experiment because it not have all of the features of a "true" experiment. 

400

What is the difference between a double-barreled and double-negative question?

Double-barreled asks two things at once; double-negative confuses through wording.

400

What advantage does secondary data offer compared to collecting primary data yourself?

It is less expensive and faster because the data already exists.

400

What is standard deviation used to measure?

Spread or variability around the mean. Shows how different your data points are. 

500

What advantage does longitudinal research offer that cross-sectional research cannot?

It allows researchers to see how individuals or groups change and how earlier events influence later outcomes.

500

List two common threats to internal validity in an experiment. In other words, what can ruin the researchers' ability to prove causality? 

Selection bias, history, maturation, attrition

500

What is an index on a survey?  

When researchers add together responses from several related survey items to create one score. 

500

Name two common sources criminologists use for secondary data analysis.

UCR and the NCVS

500

What p-value level is typically used to determine statistical significance in criminal justice research?

p ≤ .05 (less than or equal to)

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