Participants
Measurement
Design
Statistics
Wild Card
100
Term for when some participants do not complete all parts of the study. 

What is attrition?

100

Type of definition regarding how a construct/variable will be measured in the context of a particular study.

What is operational?

100

The only general study design that allows researchers to evaluate whether there is a cause-and-effect relationship between two variables. 

What is an experimental design?

100

The term that describes extreme scores that are much higher or lower than other scores in a dataset.

What are outliers?

100

Academic papers that present one or more new research studies conducted by the authors. 

What are primary (empirical) sources?

200

A sampling technique in which researchers only recruit participants from their own community or via word-of-mouth. 

What is convenience sampling?

200

Level of measurement that has equal space between each value on the scale but does not have an absolute zero. 

What is interval?

200

A group of people growing up in the same time period.

What is a cohort?

200

The statistical measure of the direction and magnitude of the relationship between two variables.

What is Pearson's Correlation Coefficient (r)?

200

Extraneous variables that vary along with the main variables of interest in a study.

What are confounds?

300

Type of research in which members of a community play an active role in the design, analysis, and interpretation of the study findings. 

What is community-based participatory research (CBPR)?

300

Type of reliability that allows researchers to determine the degree of consistency across the items on a questionnaire/survey. 

What is internal consistency?

300

The four key requirements for a study to be considered an experiment. 

What is 1) at least 1 experimental & 1 control group, 2) at least 1 IV, 3) at least 1 DV, and 4) random assignment?

300

Term that represents when the effect of one independent variable is dependent on the level of another independent variable. 

What is an interaction?

300

Process in qualitative research that includes identifying and labelling relevant parts of the data to identify key themes.

What is thematic coding?

400

A sampling technique in which researchers intentionally recruit a certain participant demographic (e.g., gender, race/ethnicity) at a higher percentage than the general population. 

What is oversampling?

400

Type of measurement validity that assesses the extent to which a measure covers the entire scope of the construct. 

What is content validity?

400

Type of group assignment in which all participants complete all study conditions in a randomized order.

What is within-subjects?

400

Appropriate statistical test for a study with one nominal-level IV (with three groups) and one interval-level DV.

What is a one-way ANOVA?

400

Assessments that are intended to help track a participant's progress throughout the duration of an intervention. 

What are formative assessments/evaluations?

500

The words that make up the WEIRD acronym.

What is Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic?

500

Brain imaging technique that measures brain activity via blood flow while the participant is completing a task. 

What is functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)?

500

An advanced developmental design that allows researchers to compare performance of participants from the same age group at different time points. 

What is time-lag?

500

Group of statistical tests that use the median as the measure of central tendency. 

What are non-parametric tests?

500

One example of a post-hoc test that is used for interpreting the results of an ANOVA.

What is Fisher's LSD, Tukey's HSD, and/or Bonferroni?

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