Aims and Hypotheses Flashcards
1
Q
What is an aim?
A
A statement of the study’s purpose - for example, Asch’s aim might have been: ‘to study majority influence in an umambiguous task’.
Research should state its aim beforehand so that it is clear what the study intends to investigate.
2
Q
What is a null hypothesis?
A
- What you are going to assume is true during the study,
- Very often, the null hypothesis is a prediction that there is no relation between the key variables in the study, or that there is no difference between the scores from various conditions of an experiment.
2
Q
What is an alternative hypothesis?
A
- If the data force you to reject your null hypothesis, then you accept your alternative hypothesis instead,
- If your null hypothesis was that two variables aren’t linked, then your alternative hypothesis would be that they are linked.
3
Q
What is a directional hypothesis?
A
- A hypothesis might predict a difference between results obtained by two different groups of people,
- If the hypothesis states which group will do better, it is making a directional hypothesis,
- Directional hypotheses are often used when previous research findings suggest which way the results will go.
4
Q
What is a non-directional hypothesis?
A
- Would predict a difference, but wouldn’t say which group would do better,
- In example, might say that one group will significantly outperform the other without indicating which,
- Can be used when there is little previous research in the area under investigation, or when previous research findings are mixed and inconclusive.
5
Q
What is the independent variable?
A
- An independent variable is a variable directly manipulated by the researcher,
- In example, in a test on student exam results, the independent variable could be whether they used a revision guide; it is under direct control of the researcher.
6
Q
What is the dependent variable?
A
- Is the variable that will be affected by changes in the independent variable,
- In the example of exam performance, the grade is dependent on whether a revision guide is being used,
- Ideally in a study the only thing that influences the DV is the IV.
7
Q
What are extraneous variables and confounding variables?
A
- Extraneous variables are any variable that could affect what you are trying to measure,
- If these actually are influencing the DV then they are called confounding variables.
8
Q
What is operationalisation?
A
- Variables must be operationalised, meaning that the process through which the variables are measured must be described,
- Operationalisation allows others to see exactly how you are going to define and measure your variables.