chapter 11
chapter 11 (pt. 2)
chapter 12
chapter 4
wildcard ;)
100

This is the general term for a potential alternative explanation for a research finding and is a threat to internal validity.

What is a confound?

100

This occurs when the IV has no effect on the DV being tested, resulting in no significant covariance between the two variables.

What is a null effect?

100

This is the number of participants you would need if you were conducting a 2x2 between-subjects design with 20 participants per condition.

What is 80 participants?

100

This infamous experiment studied the effects of untreated syphilis on men's health over the course of 40 years and was conducted unethically on 600 Black men beginning in 1932.

What is the Tuskegee Study?

100

This type of threat to a study's internal validity arises when a change in behavior arises spontaneously over time.

What is maturation threats?

200

This type of threat to internal validity occurs when a certain type of person/participant withdraws from the study between time 1 and time 2.

What is attrition threat?

200

This is the reason why we don't frequently hear about null effects.

What is publication bias?

200

A study using a 2x3 design would have this many IVs.

What is two IVs?

200

This document was written at the request of the US Congress and outlined the ethical guidelines that researchers should follow when conducting studies with human subjects.

What is the Belmont Report?

200

In this type of study design, neither the participant nor the researcher knows who is in the control/treatment group.

What is a double-blind study?

300

This type of threat occurs when the method of measurement changes over the course of the study.

What is instrumentation threat?

300

These are two ways researchers can minimize obscuring factors.

What are maximizing between-group differences and minimizing within-group differences?

300

For this interaction effect, the influence of one IV on the other reverses across levels of the other IV

What is a crossover interaction?
300

These three principles are outlined in the Belmont Report.

What are respect for persons, beneficence, and justice?

300

This is a type of independent variable that can only be measured and cannot be manipulated.

What is a participant variable?

400

These are two potential threats to internal validity that can occur in any study.

What are observer bias and demand characteristics?

400
Increasing sample size (N), using WG design, using strong manipulation, and controlling the situation all can increase this.

What is the power of a study?

400

An experiment with two IVs can tell us these two things.

What are the 2 main effects and 1 interaction effect?

400

The APA added these two additional ethical principles to the three that were outlined in the Belmont report.

What are integrity and Fidelity/Responsibility?

400

This type of interaction occurs when one IV has an influence on one level of the other IV, but not other levels of it.

What is a spreading interaction?

500

Researchers typically implement control groups, random assignment/matched groups, and counterbalancing to combat these three threats to internal validity.

What are design confound, selection effect, and order effect?

500

Weak manipulations, insensitive measures, and the ceiling/floor effect all can result in this.

What are low between-group differences?

500

These are the two main statistical concerns when investigating causal claims.

What are significance and effect size?

500

When planning to conduct a study, you would take these following steps to attain IRB approval.

What are a description of the study, the risks/benefits of participation, procedures for informed consent, and protection of privacy?

500

This study observed the effects of power and authority on participant's decision to deliver a series of electric shocks to what they believe is another participant.

What is the Milgram study?