Research Methods
Psychology of Smartphones
Criminal Minds
The Lies We Tell Ourselves
It's Not Me, It's You
100

The variable that is manipulated by the researcher in a true experiment.

What is the independent variable (IV)?

100

Another name for learning.

What is conditioning?

100

This hormone is associated with increased levels of aggression. Males produce approximately 10 times more of this than females.

What is testosterone?

100

Festinger used this research method to investigate the cognitive dissonance experienced by members of a doomsday cult when the predicted end of the world date passed without incident. 

What is covert observation?

100

When summarising any research on attraction, these 4 parts of a study are really important to include.

What are the Aim, Method, Results and Conclusion?

200

This type of study uses more than one research method (method triangulation) and is typically focused on one or a small number of participants. 

What is a case study?

200

This man is considered the 'father' of classical conditioning.

Who is Ivan Pavlov?

200

The man allowed psychologists to determine that the frontal lobe was responsible for impulse control and related behaviours when he survived an accident that involved a metal pole being shot through his skull.

Who is Phineas Gage?

200

Participants were asked to 'cross out all the e's' in these two types of texts when we investigated automatic processing (the processing of information that guides behaviour without conscious awareness). 

What are normal and nonsense texts?

200

When we think beautiful people must be good people, they are benefitting from this effect. It refers to the tendency for an impression created in one area to influence opinion in another area.

What is the halo effect?

300

This type of research gathers numerical data that can be analysed with statistics. 

What is quantitative research?

300

This type of learning involves rewards and punishments.

What is operant conditioning?

300

This part of the brain is tiny but has a big job in helping to process emotion, especially fear and anger. 

What is the amygdala?

300

This was the underpinning theory we investigated when we looked at the impact of listening to music while doing maths. 

What is the working memory model?

300

These researchers carried out a study in 2007 that investigated how similarity affects attraction using single, American university students. A high correlation was found between descriptions of an ideal partner and self-descriptions, demonstrating that perceived similarity is important in mate selection.

Who are Markey and Markey?

400

This type of validity is concerned with whether the researcher is measuring what they think they are measuring (or how well controlled the study is). 

What is internal validity?

400

Once the notification sound on your smartphone reliably triggers you to check your phone for messages, it has become this element of classical conditioning.

What is a conditioned stimulus?

400
Psychologists were particularly interested in the damage to this part of the brain when studying aggressive behaviour in Vietnam Vets with head injuries.

What is the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC)?

400

This participant bias may explain why the results of the 'Impact of listening to music while doing maths' did not match our hypothesis. It potentially occurred because teenagers do not typically like to be told what to do. :-)

What is the negative participant role, or the 'screw-you' effect?

400

This critical thinking concept refers to how well-controlled a study was and whether or not we can use the results to determine causation. 

What is internal validity?

500

This type of validity refers to how generalisable the findings of a study are to other groups of people.

What is population validity?

500

Completing the annoying reminders on my smartphone to encourage me to drink more water is an example of this type of response in operant conditioning. 

What is negative reinforcement?

I'm removing the annoying reminder to encourage a behaviour to occur/increase.

500

This phenomenon happens when you observe someone else experience a reward of some kind as a result of their behaviour. This is a key component of Social Learning theory.

What is vicarious reinforcement?

500

This inferential test was performed in the Music and Maths experiment to determine whether the results were significant or not. 

What is a Wilcoxon's Signed Ranks test? 

(The experiment used a repeated measures design).

500

Researchers have suggested several reasons why similarity leads to attraction, including this phenomenon which occurs when other people share your values.

What is consensual validation?

M
e
n
u