Terms
Research concepts
Variables
Types of sampling
Research design
100

What is Psychology?

Psychology is the scientific study of human behaviour and mental states.

100

What is the aim?

The aim is the purpose of the experiment.

100

What is an extraneous variable?

A variable that is not the IV, but may cause an unwanted effect on the DV

100

Convenience sampling

Involves sampling participants who are readily available and willing to participate in research, without making any effort to make the sample representative 


Eg. volunteers

100
What are situational variables?

Any environmental factor that MAY affect the DV

200

What is the scientific method?

Used to obtain knowledge that involves hypothesis formulation, testing, and retesting through processes of experimentation, observation, measurement, and recording.

It is centred around generating an informed hypothesis (a prediction) and then testing it to generate evidence that either supports or refutes it.  

200

What is the difference between population and sample?

Population: is the entire group of people the researcher is interested in. It refers to a group of people with similar characteristics. 

Sample: is a smaller group of participants selected from the population. It should be representative of the population. 

200

What is a confounding variable?

A variable that has directly affected the DV

200

Random sampling

A common method of sampling which aims to ensure every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected in the sample (random)

200

What are demand characteristics?

Cues in an experiment that may signal the intention of the study

300

What are order effects?

The tendency of the order in which participants complete experimental conditions to have an effect on their behaviour

300

What is the research hypothesis?

A hypothesis is an educated guess about what the results will be, usually based on knowledge of previous research findings.

300

What's an example of a participant-related variable in an experiment testing food consumption on mental fatigue?


Age, intelligence

300

Stratified sampling

Stratified sampling involves dividing the population to be sampled into distinct subgroups, then selecting a separate sample from each group in the same proportions as they occur in the target population. 

300

What is the benefit of counterbalancing?

The participants are able to complete every experimental condition
400

What are placebo effects?

When participants respond to inactive substance or treatment as a result of their expectations

400

What are the 4 things a research hypothesis needs?

Independent Variable

Population 

A specific prediction  

Dependent Variable

400

What is a controlled variable?

Controlled variables are variables other than the IV that a researcher holds constant (controls) in an investigation, to ensure that changes in the DV are solely due to changes in the IV.

400

Strengths of random sampling?

Easy to gather a large number of participants

Large sample sizes will be more likely to be representative

400

What is the benefit of single-blind procedure

Reduces participants expectations

500

Experimenter effect/bias

When the expectations of the researcher affect the results

500

What's the difference between IV and DV?

A variable that is manipulated is known as the independent variable (IV)

The variable that is measured and may change based on what happens to the IV is known as the dependant variable (DV)

500

How can we operationalise the following IV and DV:

Studying

Test scores

(time spent) studying

test scores (above certain number)


500

Limitations of stratified sampling?

  • Access to all members of population

  • Time consuming and expensive

  • Cannot force people to participate

500

What are non-standardised instructions and procedures?

When directions and procedures differ across participants or experimental conditions