What are three types of experiments?
True/lab, field, quasi, natural
What are three sampling methods?
Random, convenience, volunteer, purposive, snowball, etc.
What are three ethical considerations?
-Informed consent, right to withdraw, debriefing, anonymity, deception considerations, justification (for any possible negative effects), researcher integrity, approval by a review board
What is another term for external validity?
Generalizability
What is the key difference between a volunteer sample and convenience or random sampling?
Volunteer sampling involves the participant approaching the researchers to ask to participate - the other two involve the researcher approaching participants.
What does MRI and fMRI stand for?
Magnetic resonance imaging and functional magnetic resonance imaging.
What are two types of validity that are relevant to assessing external validity?
Population validity and ecological validity.
What are three experimental designs?
Independent samples, matched pairs, repeated measures
Limitation: can be difficult, time consuming and impractical
What is the name of the numerical measure of some type of correlation, meaning a statistical relationship between two variables.
What is it called when we have a high probability that our sample accurately represents our target population?
Representative sampling
What is one way you can "discuss" an ethical consideration?
a) by looking at how following a consideration could affect the validity of results, b) by offering justification for ignoring particular considerations in some contexts,
What is the tradeoff to consider when attempting to keep both internal and external validity high in a study?
That under normal circumstances they are negatively correlated.