Research Methods Flashcards

1
Q

A study design that allows us to systematically investigate the world and be relatively certain that we arrive at accurate conclusions

A

Method

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2
Q

The tendency we all have to look for and accept information that reinforces what we already believe

A

Confirmation bias

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3
Q

Outlined basic ethical principles for research on people

A

Nuremberg Code

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4
Q

An experiment conducted in rural Alabama on poor Black people from 1932 to 1972 that looked at how symptoms of syphilis developed over time if left untreated. (highly unethical)

A

Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment

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5
Q

All human subjects must be informed about the research project, including any likely risks, before they agree to participate

A

Informed consent

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6
Q

Data in the form of numbers and reflect quantities or amounts

A

Quantitative data

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7
Q

Data that usually reflects general themes and might include transcripts from interviews, survey questions that ask people to explain something in their own words, or detailed notes from visiting a particular place to observe it

A

Qualitative data

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8
Q

A research method in which characteristics or behaviors are carefully controlled

A

Experiment

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9
Q

Sets of questions that subjects answer

A

Surveys

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10
Q

In this method, the researcher spends time among a group, directly observing and participating in that social world

A

Participant observation

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11
Q

Analysis of existing historical records

A

Historical analysis

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12
Q

Analysis of existing sources, focusing on key themes and patterns

A

Content analysis

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13
Q

A question about a research topic that we can reasonably answer

A

Research question

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14
Q

Item observed in a study (ex: individual people, cities, neighborhoods, apartment complexes, nations)

A

Unit of analysis

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15
Q

A factor or characteristic that has more than one possible value

A

Variable

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16
Q

Relationship between variables

A

Covariation

17
Q

Variable that causes a change in another

A

Independent variable

18
Q

Variable that changes in response to another

A

Dependent variable

19
Q

A statement about how variables are expected relate to one another

A

Hypothesis

20
Q

The entire group of interest in a study

A

Population

21
Q

Defining variables into measurable items

A

Operationalization

22
Q

Selecting representatives of the population to study

A

Sampling

23
Q

An in-depth qualitative study of a social group and the group’s culture

A

ethnography

24
Q

Method for choosing which members of a population will be in a sample

A

Sampling frame

25
Q

A representative sample in which every member of the population has some chance of being selected

A

Random sample

26
Q

Applying conclusions to a larger population outside of the group you studied

A

Generalize

27
Q

A sample where some members of the population don’t have any chance of being selected

A

Non-random sample

28
Q

Non-representativeness in a sample caused by patterns in who does and doesn’t respond

A

Nonresponse bias

29
Q

A relationship between variables

A

Correlation

30
Q

One variable causes a change in another variable

A

Causation

31
Q

Which variable is affecting the other when a relationship exists

A

Direction of the relationship

32
Q

Relationship that includes causation between variables

A

Casual relationship

33
Q

When a third variable actually explains the apparent connection between two variables

A

Spurious relationship

34
Q

Whether questions accurately measure the intended characteristic

A

Validity

35
Q

The tendency for subjects to give answers that they think are socially acceptable

A

Social desirability bias

36
Q

The consistency of measurements

A

Reliability