Correlational Research
Experiments
Factorial Experiments
Graphs
Grab Bag
100

This number tells you both the direction and strength of a correlation.


What is Pearson’s R (the correlation coefficient)?

100

The variable that an experimenter assesses or measures to determine whether or not the manipulation has had an effect.


What is the dependent variable?

100

A factorial design in which participants are randomly assigned to groups for both independent variables is called a ___ factorial design.


What is between subjects?

100

A graph that can be used to represent the pattern of relationship between scores from two quantitative variables is called this


What is a scatterplot?

100

This has to have at least two levels.


What is a variable?

200

In this type of correlation, as one variable decreases, the other increases.


What is a negative correlation?

200

This group is used in an experiment so we can compare the experimental manipulation to something lacking the treatment/intervention of interest.


What is a control group?

200

When one of the independent variables is a between-subjects factor and the other is a within-subjects factor.

            

What is a mixed factorial design?

200

A graph in which the mean value of the DV for each level of a categorical IV is represented as a vertical column.


What is a bar graph?

200

A type of validity in which results of a study can be generalized to the outside settings, other people, or over time.


What is external validity?

300

These are the three possible explanations for a correlation.


What are A causes B, B causes A, or C causes both A and B?

300

A research design used when the researcher cannot randomly assign experimental participants to groups.

What is a quasi-experiment?

300

This is the number of independent groups in a 3x4x2 between subjects factorial design


What is 24?

300

A graph in which the frequency for each bin of a quantitative variable is represented as a vertical column.


What is a histogram?

300

A type of validity in which results of the study are due to the manipulation of the independent variable and not some other factor.


What is internal validity?

400

This type of variable influences the strength or direction of a correlation between two other variables.

            

What is a moderator?

400

This type of experiment measures only one group at pretest and posttest.


What is the “really bad experiment”?

400

If one of the independent variables has a significant effect on the depending variables, we say there is this.

            

What is a main effect?

400

Graphically, the results of a factorial interaction are depicted with this type of lines.

            

What is intersecting (or non-parallel)?

400

This kind of validity refers to the degree to which a test measures what it claims, or purports, to be measuring.


What is construct validity?

500

This type of variable explains why two other variables are related.

            

What is a mediator?

500

This is the first question we should always ask when choosing our experimental design.


How many independent variables are there?

500

An example this would be finding that the effect of study method (key term recall vs. summarizing) on learning depended on the type of test (enumeration or sequential).

            

What is an interaction?

500

The equation for a line of best fit through a scatterplot is determined through this statistical procedure.

            

What is regression?

500

This principle of scientific thinking states that a hypothesis is testable only if it is able to be proven false.


What is falsifiability?

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