ethics
random
data collection
sampling strategies
methods
100

the role of ethics in psychological research

what is Ethical guidelines describe ways research is conducted to avoid doing harm to participants

100

what is generalisation

the results collected from the sample can be applied to the population of the study

100

feature and strength of structured interviews

set of per-established questions to be asked in real time face to face. Can ask the same set of questions allowing for standardization and comparison of answers.

100

features of stratified sampling

population is broken up into subgroups based on characteristics relevant to the study. then randomly sample from the subgroups in the same proportion they exist in the population

100

the feature of a cross sectional method

what is data collected from participants at one point in time. Participants may be from one sample or multiple samples

200

name the 8 ethics

Protections from harm, privacy, deception, debrief, confidentiality, withdrawal, voluntary participation, informed consent

200

what is the difference between population and sample

a sample is the subset taken from the population of the study

200

feature and strength of semi-structured interviews

set or pre-determined questions that can be asked but also allows for unprepared follow up questions. 

Allows for comparison of data as well as information/description the researcher may not have thought of.

200

features of snowballing

initial participant is chosen, then they encourage others to join the research. Used when participants are hard to find - drugs, injuries

200

the features of a case study

what is an in-depth investigation of an individual or group of people or single event. Hard to replicate - Genie the wild child
300

the reason we have withdrawal

what is so participants can leave to ensure they are protected from harm
300

what is qualitative data

data using words either written, verbal or observed

300

feature and strength of focus groups

Participants meet in a small group with the researcher to discuss topic of research.

Allows for participants to extend their answers/allows for detailed discussion.

300

one strength and limitation of random sampling

strength - research bias is minimal

limitation - unlikely to be representative of the popualtion

300

the features of an experimental method

what is having a control and experimental group, IV and DV, follows a procedure, looking for a cause and effect relationship

400

the reason we have informed consent

to ensure participants are fully aware of what the aim is, how the experiment will run so they can make an informed decision to participate or not.

400

what is needed in a hypothesis

IV, DV, popualtion/sample size, how you are measuring it, direction
400

feature and strength of objective physiological measures

can see changes in participants physiological measures (heart rate, breathing) in real time.

participants are less likely to be able to affect data collected as in it limits bias

400
one strength and limitation of snowballing

strength - allows researcher to find a sample that may otherwise be difficult to find

limitation - unlikely to represent the population, bias and or can not be generalised

400

features of observational studies

used to study behaviour where participants are monitored and notes are recorded. Can be a controlled study or a natural one.

500

what ethics are linked with using animals. state a feature of each

reduction - use limited numbers

refinement - use more than one thing on them

replacement - only use if there is no alternative


500

the role of the control group

to identify if the independent variable is responsible for the change in the dependent variable. Allows for a comparison.

500

feature and strength of subjective measures like a rating scale

rating scale allows attitudes to be measured using a scale of strength of agreement to statements

data can be anaylsed

500

feature, strength and limitation of convenience sampling

what is using participants who are easily accessible

strength - costs and time is low

limitation - researcher bias

500

features of a correlational study

measures the relationship between two varaibles (not cause and effect as no IV).

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