WEEK 2 - Research methods in psychology Flashcards
Dangers of misinformed practice
- Bettelheim’s theory of autism
- Frontal lobotomy
Theory
A systematic way of organising and explaining observations
Hypothesis
The prediction about the relationship of two or more variables
A good theory has what?
- Fits the known facts
- Makes new testable predictions
- Is falsifiable
Naturalistic Observation
The researcher carefully observes behaviour without intervening
Case study
In-depth investigation of an individual person/situation
Survey
Using questionnaires or interviews to gather information about specific aspects of behaviour
Correlational research
Looking for relationships among variables
Experimental research
To establish causation, the researcher manipulates one variable and measures its effect on another variable
Population vs Sample
Population - the entire group of people we are interested in studying
Sample - a subset of the population selected for the study
Operationalising variables
Turning abstract concepts into concrete variables that we can measure or manipulate
Reliability & Validity
Reliability - does the measure produce consistent results
Validity - does it measure what it’s supposed to measure
Random assignment
Participants are equally likely to be assigned to the experimental or control condition.
Source of bias - participant
- demand characteristics (respond in a way they think the experimenter wants them to respond)
- placebo effects (participants condition improves because they believe the procedures will help them)
Source of bias - experimenter
expectancy effects (experimenters expectations and behaviour bring about a change rather than the IV itself)