Cognitive Practical Flashcards
Aim
To investigate how memory is affected by organisation/disorganisation of information (word lists)
Procedure & hypothesis
Hypothesis is directional Having an organised list of words you are more likely to remember more words, and if you receive a disorganised word list you are less likely to remember more words
Design used
independent groups design
Strength of experimental design
No practical effectsUsed repeated measured designDue to participants only taking part in the study once they will not receive a fatigues effects and won’t have had previous practice which would have made their second attempt produce better results
Weakness of experimental design
Can’t control participants variables such as individual differences in memoryPeople who received organised lists could have a better memory and that’s the reason they do well
Statistical test used
Wilcoxon ranks test
State three reasons for using your statistical test
Ordinal dataindependent groups designhypothesis is directional, people will remember more words when organised
Results
For a wilcoxon signed ranked test, a one tailed hypothesis, N = 10 and p<0.05, critical value is 11Our observed value of T was 12Since the observed value is more than the critical value, the results are not significant. Consequently, we reject the research hypothesis and accept the null hypothesisAs such, participants do not remember significantly more words from a concrete word-list than an abstract word-list except by chance
Conclusion
Organisation does not impact your memory significantly meaning organisation does not affect your memory except by chance.
Objectivity
StrengthEvery participant received same unbiased treatmentDouble-blind studyResearchers unaware of scores of people and whether they were disorganised/organisedGathered quantitative data and used wilcoxon ranks test to analyseShowing that results received does tell us their true scores and whether results are significant or not
Population validity
WeaknessTarget population = all adults and young peopleSample = 16-18 yr olds in sixth formSurpassed GCSE’s well enough to move forward in education, majority if not all of sample considerably good memory, more than 7+- items which is the average. Less generlisableOpportunity sampling = biasBUTBoth gendersgeneralisable to both
Construct validity
StrengthDid measure organisation within listsBUTparticipants could have organised the list themselves, so when we are measuring a persons disorganised list we aren’t actually measuring a disorganised list but an organised one. Measuring chunking.
Reliable
StrengthReceived scores directly from participantsDouble blindTimed test and used same script including debrief, furthing increasing reliabilityEvery test repeated would produce same results due to standardised proceduresMeaning results are reliable