Basics
Ethics
Design
Methods
Mystery
100

What is research in the context of communications?

A systematic process of gathering and analyzing data to answer questions about communication and human behavior

100

What are the three principles of The Belmont Report?

Respect for persons, beneficence, and justice

100

What would be the first step in the research process after selecting a research topic?

Review of existing literature

100

What is secondary research?

The summary or synthesis of existing data from published or syndicated sources.

100

What is reflexivity in qualitative research?

When the researcher reflects on how their own background and presence influence the study.

200

What are the two main kinds of research methods?

Qualitative and Quantitative

200

Why do we need ethics in research? Name any two

minimize deception, prevent harm, protect privacy 

200

What are independent and dependent variables?

Independent = cause or predictor; Dependent = effect or outcome

200

When is secondary research most useful?

When conducting a literature review or identifying gaps in knowledge

200

What is one strength and one limitation of online interviewing?

Strength: inexpensive and geographically flexible; Limitation: harder to build rapport.

300

What differentiates scientific research from informal ways of knowing? Name 2

It’s systematic, replicable, and theory-driven

300

What type of harm did the Stanford Prison Experiment demonstrate?

Psychological and emotional harm

300

Name any two types of research questions in communication research

Questions of fact, value, variable relations, or policy

300

What are two limitations of focus group research?

Dominant participants may skew discussion; easy to overgeneralize findings.

300

What is it called when a concept has no variation in a study?

A constant

400

What are theories and why are they important in research?

Theories are interconnected propositions that explain phenomena and guide data collection and interpretation

400

What is the main purpose of an Institutional Review Board (IRB)?

To protect research participants by ensuring ethical standards are met

400

What’s the difference between quantitative and qualitative research questions?

Quantitative asks “what/why” (relationships); qualitative asks “how/meaning

400

Define concept vs. variable.

A concept is an abstract idea; a variable is its measurable representation.


400

What is a mediating variable and how does it function?

It explains the mechanism linking the IV and DV — it is both an effect of X and a cause of Y.

500

Explain how deductive and inductive reasoning differ in research.

Deductive starts with theory → hypothesis → data; Inductive starts with data → patterns → theory.

500

What are unique ethical concerns in communication research? Name 3

Data security, unbiased interpretation, and responsibility to public stakeholders.


500

Name three disadvantages of secondary research

not customized to the topic, limited, lack of depth, conflicting view points

500

Describe one threat to credibility in qualitative research and how to address it.

Researcher bias → addressed through reflexivity and triangulation.

500

For forty years, this U.S. study observed a group of Black men with syphilis without telling them they had it — even after treatment became available.
Name the experiment, and identify two major ethical principles it violated.

The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment — it violated:

  • Respect for Persons (no informed consent), and

  • Beneficence (knowingly causing harm by withholding treatment