M2: Introduction to Social Psychology (additional) Flashcards

1
Q

the age of passionate measurement of social phenomena

A

19th century

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2
Q

_______ agreed that scientific experimentation with human beings is not feasible

A

19th-century experts

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3
Q

It was not before the _____ that the present-day definition of a scientific experiment as a comparative measurement of experimental and control groups.

A

1910s

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4
Q

It was not until the ______ that the ________ (RCT) became the ideal experiment in the social sciences (and medicine)

A

1950s ; randomized controlled trial

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5
Q

The term ________ has always referred to widely varying research procedures.

A

experiment

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6
Q

In _________ and ________ (as well as in medical research), a particular definition of the scientific experiment, a truly scientific
experiment entails comparing experimental groups that received a treatment with control groups that did not receive the treatment and, if a difference is found, calculating its statistical significance.

A

contemporary social science and psychology

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7
Q

The groups must be composed on the basis of chance. To eliminate the possible influence of expectations concerning the outcomes, preferably both the participants and the conductors of an experiment are kept unaware of the group to which each participant has been assigned.

A

Statistical soundness and comparability

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8
Q

A truly scientific experiment is a ________ and ideally it is a _______ RCT.

A

randomized controlled trial ; double-blind

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9
Q

RCT in medicine

A

randomized clinical trial

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10
Q

Since the _____, social science handbooks and publication manuals have presented the RCT as the methodological standard for investigating causal relations.

A

1950s

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11
Q

Much of the foundation of the modern approach to social experimentation can be traced back to the work of the famous statistician ________ in the ______.

A

Ronald Fisher ; 1920s

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12
Q

Fisher refined the notion of __________ and pointed out that no two groups could ever be identical.

A

random assignment

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13
Q

Fisher noted that allocation of subjects to treatment and control groups by _______ (by the flip of a coin or from a table of random numbers, for example) ensures that differences in the average behavior of the two groups can be safely attributed to the treatment.

A

pure chance

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14
Q

As a result, the direction of causality can be determined using ___________.

A

basic statistical calculations

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15
Q

Fisher also recognized that _________ provides a means of determining the statistical properties of differences in outcomes between the groups.

A

randomization

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16
Q

The random assignment of human subjects to two groups to examine the effects of social policies.

A

social experiment

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17
Q

One group, called the “__________” is offered or required to participate in a new program,

A

treatment group

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18
Q

A second group, the “_________” receives the existing program.

A

control group

19
Q

The two groups are monitored over time to measure differences in their _______.

A

behavior

20
Q

The behavioral differences are sometimes called the “________” of the program.

A

impacts

21
Q

Commonly measured behavioral outcomes in social experiments include:

A

EERHEC
1. earnings
2. employment
3. receipt of transfer payments
4. health
5. educational attainment
6. child development

22
Q

Sample sizes in social experiments have ranged from under _____ to well over _____.

A

under 100 – over 10,000

23
Q

Limitations of SE

social experiments require that a control group be denied the policy change given to the treatment group.

A

Considered disadvantaged

24
Q

Limitations of SE

Denial of program services may be viewed as constituting an ethical breach, thus limiting social experiments to places where resources prevent all eligible individuals from being served.

A

Unethical

25
Q

Limitations of SE

Although well-designed experiments have a high degree of internal validity (inferences are valid for the tested sample), they may not have ________ (they are not generalizable to other settings).

A

external validity

26
Q

Limitations of SE

One common criticism of experiments is that because of their _________, they do not generate the macroeconomic, “community,” effects that a fully operational program would generate

A

limited size

27
Q

Limitations of SE

social experiments take time to _______ and ______, usually several years.

A

design and evaluate

28
Q

Limitations of SE

________ may not want to wait the __________ to find out if a particular program works.

A

Policymakers ; required time

29
Q

Limitations of SE

in practice, it has often proven difficult to implement ________.

A

random assignment

30
Q

Limitations of SE

Individuals may not be willing to ________ in a research study, and in cases where collaboration between researchers and government agencies is required,

A

participate

31
Q

Limitations of SE

The treatment and control groups that are tested may turn out to be _________ of the target population.

A

unrepresentative

32
Q

TRUE or FALSE
Because of the various limitations of social experiments, other means of evaluating the effects of social policies have been developed.

A

TRUE

33
Q

Other means of evaluating the effects of social policies. These are generally termed “_________” or “_________ methods.

A

non-experimental or quasi-experimental”

34
Q

_________ methods monitor the behavior of persons subjected to a new policy (the treatment group) and select a “comparison group” to serve the role of a control group.

A

Non-experimental

35
Q

In a non-experimental method, _________ is not used to select the two groups, it is never known for sure whether the comparison group is identical to the treatment group in ways other than receipt of the treatment.

A

randomization

36
Q

Many researchers match treatment group members to persons in the _______ population to make the groups as similar as possible.

A

nonparticipating

37
Q

The matches are usually done using ________ and ________ characteristics such as age, education, race, place of residence, employment and earnings history, and so on.

A

demographic and economic characteristics

38
Q

One popular matching technique is ___________, which uses a weighted average of the observed economic and demographic characteristics of the nonparticipating population to create a comparison group.

A

propensity score matching

39
Q

A particularly attractive nonexperimental method is the “________________.”

A

natural experiment

40
Q

________ experiments often are used to test the effects of social policies already in place.

A

Natural experiments

41
Q

The natural experiment takes advantage of the way a new policy has been implemented so that the comparison group is almost a ___________.

A

true control group

42
Q

This example is what type of experiment?

During the Vietnam War, military conscription was a national lottery process that selected individuals based on their birth date. Researchers can test the effects of conscription on future behavior by comparing outcomes like educational attainment or earnings between conscripted and non-conscripted individuals. They can attribute the “impacts” to conscription by adjusting the impacts of conscription for differences in military service in the treatment and comparison groups. However, the validity of this procedure depends on the comparability of military service veterans in the two samples. The study’s validity relies on the comparability of military service veterans.

A

Natural experiment

43
Q

Robbers Cave Experiment is a famous ______________.

A

social psychology experiment