Terms
Research
Perspectives
Research Specifics
Misc.
100

The scientific study of the mind and behavior.

What is psychology?

100

Lett the participant know before the study what it is about and what they are going to be asking to do.

What is Informed Consent?

100

This perspective uses psychological science to identify the causes and treatment of psychological disorders.

What is the clinical perspective?

100

If the test provides the same or very similar results consistently then it is said to have this.

What is reliability? 

100

True/False: Most scientific studies prove facts.

What is False?

200

This is when we take an abstract concept and turn it into something measurable.

What is operational definition?

200
This type of validity has occurred in research when it is generalizable to the population.

What is External Validity?

200

This perspective uses a viewpoint to examine how biological factors like genetics, the brain, hormones, and the nervous system influence human behavior and mental processes.

What is the biological perspective?

200
This variable is manipulated in experimental research.

What is the independent variable?

200

True/False: Correlation does equal causation.

What is False?

300

This is when we fully explain the purpose and procedures of the research to remove as much after effect. (occurs after the study is completed)

What is debriefing?

300
This is when neither the participant or the researcher know who is receiving the treatment or placebo.

What is a double-blind experiment?

300

This perspective suggests that a person learns of the rules along with the accepted norms of a society via interacting with other persons. 

What is the social perspective?

300

This is a type of relationship in correlational research when the value in one variable increases while the value in another variable also increases.

What is a positive relationship? 

300

The three areas of the biopsychosocial model.

What is biology, psychology, and social relationships?

400

This is when we only look at the evidence that supports what we believe is right. 

What is confirmation bias?

400

Case studies, interviews, and surveys are all examples of this type of research.

What is descriptive research?

400

This perspective focuses on how interactions of thinking, emotion, creativity, and problem solving abilities affect how and why you think the way you do. 

What is the cognitive perspective?

400

State the IV in this example: A student who receives 8 hours of sleep will perform better on their exam.

What is amount of sleeping?

400

This man created the first documented experimental research in the field of psychology.

Who is Wilhelm Wundt? 

500

This is the tendency for people to be more confident in their own abilities, such as driving, teaching, or spelling.

What is the overconfidence bias?

500

This is the magnitude of the relationship between manipulated and measured variables. It is represented on a scatterplot.

What is effect size?

500

This perspective focuses on how our social, emotional, physical, cognitive, and moral development change overtime.

What is the developmental perspective?

500

This is your statement about the relationship of the variables you have selected for your research.

What is hypothesis?

500

This man created the psychodynamic approach and is mistakenly known as the father of psychology.

Who is Sigmund Freud?

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