Task 9 Chapter 10 Using Between Subjects And Within Subjects Experimental Designs Flashcards
What is a factorial design?
Incorporates two or more independent variables in a single experiment
What is the main advantage of a factorial design?
Allows to asses the effect of each independent variable on the dependent variable separately
What is the main effect?
The separate effect of each independent variable
How do you calculate the main effects of your independent variables?
- Average the group means in the first column and write the result under the first column
- Do the same for the group means in the second column—> group means
- average the group means across the first row and write the result to the right of the first row
- Do the same for the second row—>row means
What is interaction?
Present when the effect of one variable changes across the levels of another independent variable
What are simple main effects?
Represents the effect of one iv (.e.g. memorization instruction) at a given level of the other independent variable (e.g role assigned)
When can you tell in a graph that there might be interaction?
When the graph lines representing different levels of an independent variable are not parallel
What are high order factorial designs?
Those that include any number of levels a given factor and any number of factors.
What are two important problems that concern the number of subjects required to the design and complexity of potential interactions?
- Extended factorial experiments tend to get out of hand quickly with the amount of subjects you need.
- Number and complexity of the resulting interactions —> because data from such designs is hard to interpret most investigators limit factorial designs to no more than 3 factors