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Published byKaren Norman Modified over 6 years ago
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THE EXPERIMENT An EXPERIMENT allows researchers to control or manipulate the situation being studied
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IMPORTANT! INFORMED CONSENT
ALL experiments MUST meet the American Psychological Association’s (APA) code of ethics There must be __________________________ from participants All risks must be presented and no harm can be done to the subject Animals must be treated humanely INFORMED CONSENT
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EXPERIMENTAL VARIABLES
INDEPENDENT VARIABLE __________________________: can be manipulated by the experimenter __________________________: experimenters predict this will be affected by the manipulations of the independent variable (“DEPENDS” on the independent variable) EVERY experiment has at least one of each! DEPENDENT VARIABLE
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EXPERIMENTAL REQUIREMENTS
To eliminate “chance” in an experiment, a _______________________ is needed Control subjects are not treated the same as those being experimented upon. HOW IS THIS DONE? 1) RANDOM ASSIGNMENT: subjects are randomly assigned to control and experimental groups (to avoid bias) 2) _______________: an inactive substance used as a control in an experiment (not always used) CONTROL CONDITION PLACEBO
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GETTING ACCURATE RESULTS
SINGLE-BLIND STUDY _____________________________: subjects do NOT know whether they are in an experimental or control group To eliminate any other bias, we might run a… DOUBLE-BLIND STUDY: Neither the experimenter nor the subjects know who is in each group.
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Shortcomings of Experimentation
Not always representative of population Most volunteers = college students Participants are aware of their actions SOLUTIONS? _____________________: the careful study of behavior conducted in a natural setting outside the lab. Example: Prejudice in offices and schools ↑ FIELD RESEARCH
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