1/92
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
---|
No study sessions yet.
Psychology
the scientific study of behaviour and mental process
Biological Approach
examines how one's biology affects behaviour and mental processes
Cognitive Approach
examine human thought and behaviour in terms of how we interpret, process and remember events
Learning Approach
interested in how humans and animals learn
Social Approach
interested in how we work in the social world and looks at how individuals interact with each other and in groups
Nature
debate that result from innate, genetic factors
Nurture
debate that result from environmental influences
Aim
general statement about the purpose of an investigation
Hypothesis
Testable statement predicting a difference between levels of the independent variable or a relationship between variables
Null hypothesis
Testable statement saying that any difference or correlation in the results is due to chance that no pattern in the results has arisen because of the variables being studied
Non-directional hypothesis
A statement predicting only that one variable will be related to another that there will be a difference in the DV between levels of IV in an experiment or that there will be a relationship between the measured variables in a correlation. Also called two-tailed
Directional hypothesis
A statement predicting the direction of a relationship between variables in an experiment whether the levels of the IV wil priduce an increase or decrease in the DV or in a correlation whether an increase in one variable will be linked to an increase or a decrease in another variable. Also called one-tailed
Experiment
an investigation looking for a causal relationship in which an independent variable is manipulated and is expected to be responsible for changes in the dependent variable
Variable
condition that changes
independent variable
factor under investigation in an experiment which is manipulated to create two or more conditions and is expected to be responsible for changes in the dependent variable
Dependent variable
factor in an experiment which is measured and is expected to change under the influence of the independent variable
Extraneous variable
variable which either acts randomly, affecting the DV in all levels of the IV or systematically, ie. on one level of the IV so can obscure the effect of the IV, making the results difficult to interpret
Confounding variable
type of extraneous variable that affect the performance of participants
Situational variable
type of extraneous variable caused by an aspect of the environment
Operationalisation
definition of variables so that they can be accurately manipulated, measured or quantified and replicated. This includes the IV and DV in experiments and the two measured variables in correlation
Standardisation
keeping the procedure for each participant in an experiment exactly the same to ensure that any differences between participants or conditions are due to the variables under investigation rather than differences in the way they were treated
Sample
part of a population the group of people selected to represent the population in a study
Representative sample
sample that represent the population
Sampling technique
method used to obtain the participants for a study from the population
Opportunity sample
participants are chosen because they are available
Volunteer sample
participants are invited to participate. Also known as self-selected sample
Random sampling
all members of the population are allocated numbers and a fixed amount of these are selected in a unbiased way
Stratified sampling
grouping population into categories and choosing a sample where participants from each category match the proportions rom the population
Experimental condition
one or more of the situations in an experiment which represent different levels of the IV and are compared (or compared to a control condition)
Control condition
a level of the IV from which the IV is absent. It's compared to one or more experimental condition
Laboratory experiment
research method where there is an IV, a DV and strict controls. It looks for a causal relationship and is conducted in a setting that is not in the usual environment for the participants with regard to the behaviour they are performing
Demand characteristics
features of the experimental situation that gives away the aims. They can cause the participants to try to change their behaviour to match their beliefs about what is supposed to happen, which reduces the validity of the study
Random allocation
a way to reduce the effect of confounding variables. Participants are put in each level of the IV such that each person has an equal chance of being in any condition
Field experiment
investigation looking for a casual relationship in which an independent variable is manipulated and is expected to be responsible for the changes in the dependent variable. It's conducted in the normal environment for the participants for the behaviour being investigated
Generalisability
being able to apply findings of a study more widely to other settings and population
Natural experiment
investigation looking for a causal relationship in which the independent variable cannot be directly manipulated by the experimenter. Instead they study the effect of an existing difference or change. Since the researcher cannot manipulate the levels of the IV, it's not a true experiment
Experimental design
The way in which participants are allocated to levels of the IV
Independent measures design
an experimental design in which a different group of participants is used for each level of the IV
Repeated measures design
an experimental design where each participant performs in every level of the IV
Participant variables
individual differences between participants that could affect their behaviour in a study. They could hide or exaggerate differences between levels of the IV
Order effects
practice and fatigue effects are the consequence of participating in a study more than once. They cause changes in performance between conditions that are not due to the IS, so can obscure the effect on the DV
Fatigues effect
situation where participants' performance declines because they experience the experimental task more than once
Counterbalancing
used to overcome order effects in a repeated measures design. Each possible order of levels of the IV is performed by a different sub-group of participants. This can be described as an ABBA design as the participants do condition A then B and half of B then A
Matched pairs
experimental design where participants are arranged into pairs. Each pair is similar in ways that are important to the study and one member of each pair performs in a different level of the IV
Self reports
Research method that obtains data by asking participants to provide info about themselves
Questionnaires
Research method that uses written questions
Closed questions
Questionnaire that produce quantitative data. They only have a few, stated alternative responses abd no opportunity to expand on answers
Open questions
Questionnaire that produce qualitative data. Participants give full and detailed answers in their own words
Social desirability bias
Trying to present oneself in the best light by determining what a test is asking
Filler questions
Items put into a questionnaire to disguise the aim of the study by hiding the important questions among irrelevant ones so that participants are less likely to alter their behaviour by working out the aims
Interviews
Research method using verbal questions asked directly
Structured interview
Interview with quedtions in a fixed order which may be scripted. Consistency might also be required for the interviewer's posture, voice
Unstructured interview
interview in which most questions depend on the respondent's answers . A list of topics may be given to the interview
Semi-structured interview
Interview with fixed list of open and closee questions. Interviewer can add more questions if necessary
Case studies
detailed investigation of one instance, usually a single person. These may be rare or instances that could not be created artificially but can provide useful information. It uses a range of techniques
Naturalistic observation
Study conducted by watching the participants' behaviour in their normal environment without interference from researchers in either the social or physical environment
Unstructured observation
Study conducted by watching the participants' behaviour in a situation in which the socual or physical environment has been manipulated by the researchers. It can be conducted in either the participants' normal environment or in an artificial situation
Structured observation
Study in which the observer records only a limited range of behaviours
Behavioural categories
Activities recorded in an observation. They should be operationalized and should break continuous stream of activity into discrete recordable events. They must be ovservable actions rather than inferred states
Participant observer
Researcher who watches fron the perspective of being part of social setting
Overt
Role of observer is obvious to the participants
Covert
Role of observer is not obvious because they are hidden or disguised
Non-participant observer
Researcher who doesn't become involved in the situation being studied by watching through a one-way glass or by keeping apart from the social group of aprticipants
Correlation
Research method which looks for a causal relationship between two measured variables. A change in one variable is related to a change in the other
Correlation coefficient
number ranging from -1 to +1 that indicates the strength of correlation
Positive correlation
Relationship between two variables where both variables increase together
Negative correlation
Relationship between two variables where one variable increases while the other decreases
Quantative data
numerical results about the quantity of a psychological measure such as pulse rate or a score on an intelligence test
Qualitative data
descriptive, in-depth results indicating the quality of a psychological characteristic, such as responses to open questions in self-reports or case studies and detailed observations
Pilot study
preliminary test of procedures of a study that helps identify which variables will be important to control before the experiment starts. This helps the participants understand directions
Floor effect
all performance is low because the task was too difficult
Ceiling effect
all performance is high because the task is too easy
Ethical issues
problems in research that raise concerns about the welfare of paricipants
Ethical guidelines
pieces of advice that guide psychologists to consider the welfare of participants and wider society
Protection from harm
participants should not be exposed to any greater physical or psychological risk than they would expect in their day-to-day life
Informed consent
Knowing enough about a study to decide whether you want to agree to participate or not
Presumptive consent
When informed consent isn't available
Debrief
giving participants a full explanation of the aims and potential consequences of the study at the end of a study so that they leave in at least as positive a condition as they arrives
Deception
participants should not be deliberately misinformed about the aim or procedure of the study if this is unavoidable, the study should be planned to minimize the risk of distress, and participants should be thoroughly debriefed
Confidentiality
Participants' results and personal info should be kept safely and not released to anyone outside the study
Privacy
Participants' emotions and physical space should not be invaded, they should not be observed in situations or places where they would not be expected to be seen
Right to withdraw
A participant should know that they can remove themselves, and their data, from the study at any time
Replacement
researchers should consider replacing animal experiments with alternative and avoid research that causes pain and distress if possible
Validity
extent to which the researcher is testing what they claim to be testing
Reliability
extent to which a procedure, task or measure is consistent that it would produce the same results with the same people on each occasion
Test-retest reliability
a way to measure the consistency of a test or task. The test is used twice and if the participants' two sets of scores are similar it has good reliability
Inter-observer reliability
Consistency between two researchers watching the same events whether they will produce the same records
Ecological validity
extent to which the findings of research in one situation would generalise to other situations. This is influenced by whether the situation represents the real world effectively and whether the task is relevant to real life
inter-rater reliability
Extent to which two researchers interpreting qualitative responses in a questionnaire will produce the same records from the same raw data
Mundane realism
task is relevant to real life
Placebo
bogus treatment that has the appearance of being geniune. Designed to control for subjects' expectations
Blind study
conditions where the participants are unaware of the treatment
Double blind study
neither the subjects nor experiments know who has obtained the treatment