IB Psychology - Fall Semester Study Guide

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56 Terms

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Many technological techniques are used to study brain activity, size and structure. Examples include MRI and fMRI.

Techniques to study the brain

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Specific parts of the brain perform particular functions. E.g. the amygdala perceives dangerous threats in our environment and activates the HPA axis (stress response) and it also causes a fear response.

Localization of function

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chemical messengers that are manufactured by the endocrine glands, travel through the bloodstream, and affect other tissues. They can influence behaviour. e.g. testosterone can influence aggression.

Hormones

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Any explanation that shows how a specific behaviour helps humans increase their chances of survival and/or procreation. An example is the behaviour of fear - having a healthy fear response and an amygdala that detects fear (and activates the release of stress hormones) can help us avoid danger. SM's case study shows this.

Evolutionary explanation of behaviour

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A method used for collecting and analyzing data in psychological research. Examples are true experiments, correlational studies and case studies.

Research method

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Thinking refers to the conscious process of considering or reasoning about something and decision making is making a choice based on the consideration of multiple options. Examples of theories include the dual process model of thinking and decision making (system one and system two).

Thinking and decision making

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Data that involves descriptions and summaries.

Qualitative data

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Research that records and gathers descriptive data regarding participants' subjective experiences of phenomena.

Qualitative research

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An observation that takes place in a natural environment.

Naturalistic observation

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An observation that involves not telling the subjects that they are being observed (opposite = overt observation).

Covert observation

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An observation that involves telling the subjects that they are being observed (opposite = covert observation).

Overt observation

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An observation that involves the researcher becoming a member of the group they're observing (opposite = non-participant observation).

Participant observation

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An observation that involves the researcher observing the group from an outsiders perspective (opposite = participant observation).

Non-participant observation

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An interview conducted on a small group at the same time.

Focus group interview

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A style of interview that has topics to cover, but allows flexibility in the order and content of the

questions.

Unstructured interview

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An interview that has a guide and some structure, but there is freedom to deviate (in-between a structured and unstructured style of interview).

Semi-structured interview

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An in-depth investigation of a single person, group or organization. It uses a range of methods to collect data and draw conclusions.

Case study

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A way of analysing qualitative data that requires identifying specific content (coding), group these in sub-themes (subordinate themes) and then finding more general overarching themes (superordinate).

thematic analysis

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When the researcher's own opinions, views or beliefs influence the research process.

Researcher Bias

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Using more than one data point to gather or analyze data.

Triangulation

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When more than one researcher is used to gather or analyze data.

Researcher triangulation

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When more than one method is used to gather data.

Methodological triangulation

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When data is gathered using the same people and method, but at different points in time.

Data triangulation

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A sampling method that involves the researcher selecting participants that they believe will provide them with valuable data for their study.

Purposive sampling

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A sampling method that involves using a small group of "seeds" that then go out and recruit other participants.

Snowball sampling

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How readily something can be trusted or believed.

Credibility

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This is the qualitative equivalent of generalizability, it refers to the extent to which the methods and results of a study could be transferred to a similar context (e.g. group of people).

Transferability

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The extent to which the findings from the study could apply to a different context (e.g. people, place, situation).

Generalizability

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Getting permission from participants to use their data in a study AFTER the study is conducted (this is particularly relevant for covert observations).

Retrospective consent

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The process of continual reflection upon the research process by a researcher. This is done with the aim of maintaining objectivity (and reducing bias) throughout the study

Reflexivity

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The scientific study of individual behaviour and mental processes.

Psychology

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An observable action. Although in IB Psychology it means actions and mental processes.

Behaviour

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The internal tasks we perform with our minds. Examples include thinking, decision making, remembering, and problem solving.

Mental processes /cognition

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Anything that has been observed to commonly occur. In other words, it's something that we know happens a lot, and often there might not be an obvious explanation.

Phenomenon

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Evidence that has been gathered using observation and/or experimentation.

Empirical evidence

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Takes place in a controlled environment, the researcher manipulates and controls all variables except DV

Laboratory experiment

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Takes place in a natural environment, impossible to obtain total control so there may be confounding variables, the researcher manipulates the independent variable (IV)

Field experiment

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Manipulated "cause" in experiments; also known as a "predictor variable", "manipulated variable", "explanatory variable", "exposure variable"

Independent variable

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The measured variable in experiments ("the effect")

Dependent variable

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Any variable that is not manipulated nor measured but but should be controlled

Extraneous variable

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An extraneous variable which actually influenced the DV and the results of study.

Confounding variable

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An association or link between two variables when causational infrences are not allowed. Also a statistical technique that can show whether and how strongly pairs of variables are related.

Correlation

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A relationship between two variables such that their values increase or decrease together.

Positive correlation

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A relationship between two variables such that as the value of one variable increases, the other decreases.

Negative correlation

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When there is a correlation between two variables and there is uncertainty about which variable is influencing which.

Bidirectional ambiquity

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The group in an experiment that receives a treatment that is hypothesized to have an effect.

Treatment Group

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The group in an experiment that receives a treatment (or no treatment at all) that is hypothesized to not have an effect.

Control Group

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Degree to which an experiment truly shows a cause-effect relationship between two factors (or whether some unaccounted-for confounding variables led to the results)

internal validity

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A.k.a. generalizability -- degree to which the findings of the study can be generalized to other contexts (other people, other cultures, etc.)

external validity

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the idea that cognition should be measured in settings that are as realistic as possible and that the abilities measured should be those needed in real life

ecological validity

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This type of sample draws random samples from each subgroup (ethnic, gender, etc.) within the target population -- representative, but expensive/time-consuming to gather

stratified sample

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There will be no relationship between variable X and variable Y.

null hypothesis

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is a functional neuroimaging procedure using MRI technology that measures brain activity by detecting changes associated with blood flow.

fMRI

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An amplified recording of the waves of electrical activity that sweep across the brain's surface. These waves are measured by electrodes placed on the scalp.

EEG

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a visual display of brain activity that detects where a radioactive form of glucose goes while the brain performs a given task

PET scan

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a series of x-ray photographs taken from different angles and combined by computer into a composite representation of a slice through the body

CT scan