Week 1
Week 2
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Week 5
100

A systematic investigation including research development, testing, and                          
evaluation, designed to develop or contribute to generalizable knowledge    
                        

What is Research?

100

This is the empirical method of acquiring knowledge that has characterized the development of science since the 17th century.

What is the scientific method?

100

Reports what was found from the study in great detail. States these findings without bias or interpretation. Written in past tense.

What is results?

100

The one with time 1 and time 2. Also group one and group two.

Pretest Posttest Control Group Design

100

The number of people who participated divided by the number of people asked to participate.

What is response rate?
200

These are the three basic ethical principles outlined in the Belmont Report.

Respect to persons, Beneficence, Justice

200

A principle set to explain phenomena already supported by data.

What is a theory?

200

Describes exact procedures used in study, including participants, eligibility, recruitment, and response rate. Also includes analysis and IRB approval.

What is methods?

200

Has two r's and one x and two o's. experimental and control rows.

posttest-only control group design

200

This kind of interview aims to collect data about a broader population to test a hypothesis and generate generalizable knowledge.

What is a research interview?
300

These are the two components requiring IRB review.

Human subjects, research

300

Logical, Confirmable, Repeatable, Scrutinizable

What are the four key characteristics of the scientific method?

300

explains the problem under investigation. establishes values/rationale for the study.

Introduction

300

the one with four groups

Solomon four-group design

300

Name three differences between a poll and survey.

Poll: don't need detailed responses, need immediate feedback, only one question to ask, no time for analysis

Survey: need detailed and extensive feedback, have many questions to ask, need to gather personal info, require text comments

400

What were the main issues with the Tuskegee Syphilis study?

Lack of informed consent, deception, the exploitation of vulnerable populations, and denial of penicillin treatment.

400

These are the two primary types of scientific reasoning.

Deductive (quantitative) and inductive (qualitative).

400

This is an article summary, info about why the research study was conducted, what the methods were, and the main findings.

What is an abstract?

400

XO1

one-group posttest only design

400
A response rate must be at least ____% to be considered "adequate"

50%

500

Key features of an informed consent?

Providing participant eligibility information, ensuring comprehension, promoting voluntariness, documenting that the participant agreed.

500

These are studies that are subjective, exploratory, context-dependent, and carried out via people.

What are qualitative studies?

500

A review that aims to be rigorous, but has time and/or resource constraints. Used in instances such as a public health emergency and ranges from a few weeks to a few months to conduct.

What is a rapid review?

500

the one with the circles and x(treatment)

Post-test only design with nonequivalent groups

500

Those who respond differ from those who do not in important ways relevant to your research

What is nonresponse bias?