Experimental Design
Factorial Design
Quasi-Experimental & Single Subject
Developmental Research Design
Qual & PAR
200

Each participant is only exposed to one level of the IV

What is a between-subject design?

200

In this design, there are two independent variables, each with two levels, resulting in a total of four unique conditions for experimentation.

What is a 2x2 design?

200

In research, this term describes designs that resemble true experiments but lack random assignment, often used when ethical or practical constraints exist.

What is quasi-experimental?

200

This research method involves studying individuals of different ages at a single point in time.

What is a cross-sectional method?

200

Focuses on understanding human behavior and experiences through detailed narratives. It emphasizes the context and meaning behind actions, allowing researchers to capture rich, descriptive data that quantitative methods may overlook.

What is Qualitative Research?

400

This type of design allows researchers to compare outcomes before and after an intervention in the same group, helping to control for confounding variables.

What is a pre-and post-test design?

400

This refers to the individual impact of one independent variable on a dependent variable, holding other variables constant in a factorial study.

What is a main effect?

400

A type of quantitative research that involves studying in detail the behavior of a small number of participants (2-10 ppl)

What is Single-Subject Experimental Design?

400

One challenge with longitudinal studies is participant dropout, which reduces ____

What is sample size?

400

his type of qualitative interview offers flexibility with predetermined questions, allowing the interviewer to follow up based on responses.

What is a semi-structured interview?

600

this is also known as the Repeated-Measures Design

What is Within-Subject Design?

600

This occurs when the effect of one independent variable on the dependent variable differs depending on the level of another independent variable in a study.

What are interaction effects?

600

This design introduces treatment/manipulation to the participants at different time points, on different skills, or in different settings

What is Multiple Baseline Design?

600

The combined approach that begins with a cross-sectional design and follows cohorts over time.

What is the sequential method?

600

The first step in thematic analysis, involving reading and re-reading the data to become grounded in it.

What is familiarization?

800

In this design, all participants are exposed to multiple conditions at the same time, allowing for direct comparisons of effects without the need for separate groups.

What is a simultaneous within-subject design?

800

This type of independent variable is intentionally changed by researchers, allowing causal conclusions.

What is a manipulated independent variable?

800

These five main threats can compromise the internal validity of one-group quasi-experimental designs.

What are history, maturation, testing, instrumental decay, and regression toward the mean?

800

This largest study in the U.S. tracks the brain development of children ages 9-10 over time

What is the ABCD Study?

800

This level of community involvement in PAR involves researchers seeking feedback from the community through surveys or focus groups, but with limited community decision-making power.

What is consultation

1000

These effects occur when the treatment administered in one condition influences participants' responses in subsequent conditions, potentially biasing the results.

What are carryover effects?

1000

When factorial designs include both manipulated and non-manipulated variables, the study is classified as this type.

What is a mixed factorial design?

1000

This design has a baseline phase followed by separate phases in which different treatments are
introduced.

What is an ABCA design?

1000

Growing up with social media has shaped Gen Z's communication styles and mental health uniquely compared to previous generations, demonstrating this effect in developmental research

What is cohort effects?

1000

This method in YPAR uses photography to express participants' perspectives on community issues.

What is photovoice?