Extraneous and Confounding Variables Flashcards
Extraneous Variables
any variable that influences the DV other than the IV. Variables need to be controlled or removed. They stay the same in all conditions
Confounding Variables
Variable that influences the DV other than IV but changes between conditions.
Types of EVs
Participant variables - particular to person, situational variables - particular to setting, order effects - order impacts natural behaviour, investigator effects - researcher unintentionally or intentionally influences outcome, demand characteristics - aim of study is predicted or discussed so patients change their behaviour. please-U effect or screw-U effect.
Dealing with EVs and CVs
single/double blind procedure, random allocation, randomisation, standardisation
Blind Procedure
Single - patient don’t know which condition in - demand characteristics
Double - patient and researcher don’t know which condition in - demand characteristics and investigator effects
Random Allocation
Patients randomly allocated - investigator effects and participant variables, bias
Randomisation
refers to use of chance methods to reduce researcher’s unconscious bias - investigator effects, order effects.
Standardisation
procedures used are kept the same. Keep identical. e.g. standardised instructions - all effects.