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1.2 Research Methods AP Psychology
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Methods for studying behavior…
Experimental method Surveys Naturalistic observation Case study Longitudinal method Cross-sectional method Correlational studies
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Experimental Method Carefully controlled method of investigation used to establish cause-effect relationship The experimenter purposely manipulates and controls selected variables
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Testable Hypothesis Hypothesis – statement that describes the relationship between two or more variables Must be testable, verifiable, and refutable Null Hypothesis – no new findings / no new relationship
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Hypothesis
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Null Hypothesis
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IV vs. DV Independent Variable – factor that is manipulated or controlled by the experimenter (aka explanatory variable) Dependent Variable – factor that is measured by the experimenter (aka response variable) Tips… IV influences DV Manipulate the IV, measure the DV Dependent on the independent If _________ (IV) then ___________ (DV). How the______ affects the _____. IV DV
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IV vs. DV Examples An experimenter wants to determine if playing violent video games increases the frequency of aggressive behavior in children. IV – the type of video game DV - the amount of aggressive behavior An experimenter wants to determine the relationship between rehearsal/repetition of a list of definitions of difficult SAT vocab words and later recall of these definitions IV – the amount of rehearsal/repetition DV – recall of correct definitions
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IV vs. DV Examples An experimenter wants to determine if a new drug reduces hyperactivity in children. IV – drug DV – level of hyperactivity
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Extraneous Variables Aka – confounding / lurking / hidden
Factor that the researcher failed to control or eliminate (damage the validity)
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Operational Definitions
Precise description of how the variable in a study will be manipulated and measured
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Operational Definition
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Participants in Experiments
Experimental Group – the participants who are exposed to the IV Control Group – the participants who are exposed to all experimental conditions except the IV
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Experimental Controls
Purpose – ensure all groups in the experiment are treated exactly the same, except the IV Limit lurking variables!
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Problems with Experiments
Experimenter Bias – when a researchers expectations about the outcome influence the results Sample Bias – participants are not representative of the larger population Aka selection bias Volunteer Bias – differences between those willing to participate and those who don’t
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Solutions to Problems Random Assignment – participants are assigned to EG or CG by chance Minimizes pre-existing differences between groups Placebo – an inactive substance or fake treatment used as a control ( Placebo Effect Single-Blind Study – subjects don’t know whether they are the EG or CG Double-Blind Study – neither the researcher nor the participants know which is the EG Eliminates experimenter bias
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Advantages of Experiments
Identify cause-and-effect relationships Distinguish between real and placebo effects Can control bias (double-blind) Manipulate the IV; measure the DV Replication of study; increase confidence in results (IV influences DV)
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Disadvantages of Experiments
Artificial lab vs. real life Confounding variables could cause results Biases (researcher or participant) Ethical concerns when subjects are deceived Informed consent
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Descriptive Research Methods that enable researchers to observe and describe behaviors without manipulating DO NOT establish cause-and-effect
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