Motivation
Wellbeing
Sampling
Variables
Science Inquiry
100

Physiological, social, cognitive and emotional

The four sources of motivation

100

Focuses on an individual's personal evaluation of their life satisfaction and emotional experiences.

subjective wellbeing

100

Participants are selected based on the researcher's accessibility to them

convenience sampling

100

Alter the relationship between the IV and DV, complicating results and making it difficult to determine effect of IV

Confounding variables

100

Collects subjective quantitative data

Likert scale

200

Occurs when the environment a person is in does not allow for a behaviour to be carried out competently

Amotivation

200

People may report being happier/more upset than they actually are; people may inaccurately recall experiences

Limitations of Diener's model of subjective wellbeing 

200

A population is broken into subgroups based on a shared characteristic, then participants are taken from each subgroup

stratified sampling

200

Relates to the individual characteristics of the participant

Extraneous variable (participant effects)

200

Effects observed when an experimenter's expectations or behaviours bias the results of the study

Experimenter effects

300

Is critical in the development and use of intrinsic and extrinsic motivation and occurs on a continuum


Self-determination

300

Ryff's measurement tool

Psychological Wellbeing Scale

300

Every individual in the population has an equal chance of being selected for the sample

random sampling

300

Relates to the surroundings the study takes place in 

Extraneous variable (envrionment)

300

Cues participants perceive during a study that lead them to believe they have discovered the aim of the study = change in behaviour

Demand characteristics

400

Physiological, safety, love and belonging and esteem needs

Deficiency needs



400

‘Happiness is a process, not a place – there are always new things that give life meaning and importance…new goals that you’re going to work for that are relevant to your values'

Diener (1984) 

400

Initial participants are recruited who recruit others who meet the criteria for the study

What is snowball sampling?

400

Relates to the personal characteristics, appearance and conduct of the researcher that may influence participant responses/behaviours

Extraneous variable (researcher)

400

Participants are unaware of whether they are in experimental or control group; researcher knows which group

Single-blind procedure

500

Self-actualisation, aesthetic, cognitive and self-transcendence are all examples of these

Growth needs

500

Method used to test subjective wellbeing

Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) test

500

Provides highest chance of a representative sample, thus increasing generalisability of findings

A strength of stratified sampling

500

Type of variable that decreases validity of an experiment by influencing the DV 

Extraneous variable

500

The test produces results that correlate with existing similar measures

Concurrent validity

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