Research Basics
Type of Studies
Variables & Design
Ethics in Psychology
100

What is psychology the scientific study of?

Behavior and mental processes

100

What research method observes people in their natural environment?

Naturalistic observation

100

What is the variable that a researcher manipulates?

Independent variable

100

What is informed consent?

Telling participants enough to make an informed decision

200

What is a testable prediction called?

A hypothesis

200

What type of study examines one individual or group in depth?

Case study

200

What is the variable that is measured in response?

Dependent variable

200

What is debriefing?

Explaining the study and its purpose after it ends

300

What is a theory?

A general explanation that organizes and predicts behavior or events

300

What method uses questionnaires or interviews to gather data?

Survey

300

What is the purpose of random assignment?

To reduce bias between groups

300

What organization sets ethical guidelines for psychologists?

The American Psychological Association (APA)

400

What do we call repeating a study to confirm results?

Replication

400

What is the difference between a population and a sample?

A population is the entire group; a sample is a smaller subset studied

400

What group receives the treatment?

Experimental group

400

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

To protect participants and ensure ethical research

500

Why are operational definitions important?

They make studies measurable and replicable

500

What does a correlation show — and what does it NOT show?

It shows relationships but not cause and effect

500

What do we call an outside factor that might affect results?

Confounding variable

500

What protections do animals have?

You cannot harm animals unless it is justified for “the greater human good”

600

What is the first step in the scientific method?

Forming a research question or hypothesis

600

What is a longitudinal study?

Research that follows the same group over a long period

600

What is the placebo effect?

When participants experience change because they expect it

600

What must researchers do when deception is used?

Explain it later in debriefing and justify its use

700

What does “empirical evidence” mean?

Evidence based on observation or experimentation

700

What is a cross-sectional study?

Compares different groups of people at one point in time

700

What is a double-blind procedure?

When neither the participants nor the researchers know who gets the treatment

700

Which ethical principle protects a participant’s privacy?

Confidentiality

800

Why is psychology considered a science?

Because it uses the scientific method to study behavior

800

What does a correlation coefficient tell you?

The strength and direction of a relationship between two variables

800

What does it mean if an experiment is valid?

It measures what it is supposed to measure

800

What does “protection from harm” mean in research?

Researchers must minimize physical or emotional risk

900

What is the main goal of psychological research?

To describe, predict, explain, and control behavior

900

What phrase reminds us not to confuse correlation with causation?

“Correlation does not equal causation.”

900

Why is random sampling important?

It ensures the sample represents the population fairly

900

What are the 4 main APA ethical principles?

Informed consent, protection from harm, confidentiality, and debriefing

1000

How does psychological research differ from common sense?

Research uses systematic methods and data, not opinions or assumptions

1000

Which research method allows for cause-and-effect conclusions?

The experimental method

1000

What is the difference between reliability and validity?

Reliability = consistent results; Validity = accuracy of what’s measured

1000

Before research is conducted, what must happen to ensure ethics are followed?

It must be approved by an Institutional Review Board (IRB)