Paper 2.1 Flashcards
A hypothesis in a study says ‘Emotions will differ following exposure to a happy or an angry stooge’. Is this a directional (one-tailed) hypothesis or a non directional (two-tailed) hypothesis? Include a reason for your answer.
non-directional/two-tailed (hypothesis), because the direction of change is not specified.
Write a null hypothesis that could be used with the hypothesis ‘Emotions will differ following exposure to a happy or an angry stooge’.
there will be no difference between emotions experienced by participants exposed to the happy or angry stooge
State two ways in which the research methods of an experiment and a case study are different.
- participants: many in an experiment, one (or a single unit, e.g. a family) in a case study
- controls: many in an experiment, none/few in a case study
Explain one advantage of the sampling method used in the study by Milgram (obedience).
the people are willing because they have volunteered so are likely to be prepared to complete the experiment/are unlikely to withdraw
From the study by Baron-Cohen et al. (eyes test): Describe two ways in which the study was valid.
- there were important controls between the two conditions, e.g. a glossary to ensure comprehension
- there were two control groups, one matched for IQ so intelligence wouldn’t affect the results in relation to comparing
Describe one way in which the Baron-Cohen was not valid.
the eyes test may not be measuring theory of mind it may just be a test of matching pictures to words
Bandura et al. (aggression) calculated the mean number of aggressive acts in each condition. Explain how the mean of a data set is calculated.
adding up all the (participants’) numbers/scores etc. in the data set/group and dividing by the number of numbers/scores
Identify an alternative measure of central tendency that Bandura et al. could have used.
mode/median
Define qualitative data using examples
- definition: descriptive data
- method: interviews using open questions
- data: answers to open questions
- study: Saavedra and Silverman’s descriptions of the boy with the button phobia
Define quantitative data using examples
- definition: numerical data
- methods: questionnaires using closed questions
- data: likert scale questions
- study: Andrade’s participants’ recall of names