Research Methods - Experimental Design Flashcards

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1
Q

What is experimental design?

A

Refers to the way participants are used in experiments.

How the testing of participants is arranged in relation to the experimental conditions.

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2
Q

What’s independent groups?

A

Allocation to conditions - Participants are allocated to different groups where each group experiences one level of the IV only.
(If there are two levels to the IV, two groups will be used)

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3
Q

Strength of independent groups

A
  • Order effects aren’t a problem, can give same test to both groups
  • Participants are less likely to guess the aims
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4
Q

Weakness of independent groups

A
  • You need twice as many participants

- The two groups aren’t the same so results could be from participant variables not the IV

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5
Q

How to deal with weaknesses for independent groups

A

Random allocation - theoretically distributes participant variables evenly & is an unbiased method

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6
Q

What’s repeated measures?

A

All participants experience both conditions

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7
Q

Strength of repeated measures

A
  • Participant variables are controlled

- Fewer participants needed

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8
Q

Weakness of repeated measures

A
  • Order effects are a problem as the order they complete the two tasks may be significant
  • May guess aims
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9
Q

How to deal with weaknesses for repeated measures

A

Counterbalancing - half the participants experience the conditions in one order and other half in opposite order
Single Blind Procedure - cover story about purpose

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10
Q

What’s matched pairs?

A

Participants are paired depending on a variable (eg- IQ) & each pair would be split and allocated to a different conditions

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11
Q

Strength of matched pairs

A
  • Participants only take part in a single condition so order effects aren’t a problem
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12
Q

Weakness of matched pairs

A
  • Can’t be matched exactly so could still be important differences that may effect the DV
  • Matching can be expensive and time consuming
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13
Q

How to deal with weaknesses for matched pairs

A

Conduct a pilot study to consider key variables

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14
Q

What’s a control group?

A

A groups of participants who receive no ‘treatment’

Their behaviour acts as a baseline against which the effect of the IV may be measured

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15
Q

What’s a control condition?

A

The condition that provides a baseline measure of behaviour without the IV

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