psychology research methods key terminology
psychology gcse research methods key terms terminology GCSE
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psychology research methods key terminology - Leaderboard
psychology research methods key terminology - Details
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Independant variable | The variable that is directly manipulated by the researcher |
Dependent variable | The variable that is being measured |
Extraneous variable | Any unwanted variables other than the IV that that can impact the DV |
Internal validity | The extent to which a study is measuring the effect of the IV on the DV |
External validity | The extent to which findings of study are generalizable to other populations or environment |
Manipulating | Researchers use manipulation in their research design to determine if changes in one variable impact another variable or variables |
Situational extraneous variable | Related to things in the environment that may impact how each participant responds. If a ppt is taking a test in a cold room, the temperature would be considered an extraneous variable. |
Labratory experiment | Experiment conducted under highly controlled conditions (not necessarily a laboratory), where accurate measurements are possible |
Feild experiment | Done in the everyday (i.e. real life) environment of the participants. The experimenter still manipulates the independent variable, but in a real-life setting |
Natural experiment | Studies where the experimenter cannot manipulate the IV, so the DV is simply measured and judged as the effect of an IV |
Ecological validity | The extent to which a studies findings can be generalized beyond the environment of the research |
Reliability | The extent to which a study can be repeated using a standardized procedure and gain consistent results |
Demand characteristics | When participants alter their natural behavior in response to their perceives aims/nature of the research |
Correlation | A correlation Isa way of analyzing a relationship between variables. These are known as the co-variable one and co-variable two, due to there being no IV or DV present and no control over extraneous variables a cause-and-effect relationship cannot be established |
Positive correlation | Where co-variable one increases co-variable 2 also increases |
Negative corelation | Where co-variable one increases co-variable two decreases |
Observation | An observation is a research method that involves watching and recording behavior |
Case study | Research method that focuses on one person or a small group of people such as a school or a class or a social group |
Interveiws | A research method designed to gather self-reported information directly from participants about their beliefs, opinions and attitudes |
Questionaires | Another research method that aims to gather self-reported data on a certain topic from lots of people |
Open-ended questions | There are no set responses to these style questions they allow for participants to freely respond |
Closed-ended questions | These questions have a list of pre-set responses e.g. yes/no or strongly agree/ strongly disagree |
Social desirability | When participants do not answer questions honestly because they want to be seen in the best possible light by others |