Concept ReviewResearch in Psych, 7e: Study Guide, Chapter 55-1

After you finish reading and studying each main section of the chapter, print out this document and answer the following questions to test your comprehension.

  • Essential Features of Experimental Research
  • What was Woodworth’s basic distinction (in his “Columbia bible”) between experimental and correlational research?
  • What are the three essential features of any experiment in psychology?
  • Distinguish between John Stuart Mill’s methods of Agreement and Difference, using violent TV watching and its relation to aggression as an example.
  • What is an independent variable and what is meant by the term “levels” of an independent variable?
  • Give examples of independent variables that are (a) situational, (b) task, and (c) instructional in nature.
  • Distinguish between an experimental and a control group.
  • What is a confounding variable and why is it a problem in experimental research?
  • In psychological research, what is a dependent variable?
  • What is the difference between a ceiling and a floor effect?
  • Using the construct of anxiety, show how it could be an independent variable, a dependent variable, or an extraneous variable in need of being controlled.
  • Manipulated versus Subject Variables
  • What is meant by a subject variable? Give two examples.
  • When drawing conclusions from studies using manipulated variables, statements about cause can be made. These statements cannot be made when using subject variables. Why?
  • In Bandura’s famous Bobo study, identify the primary manipulated independent variable and its levels, the subject variable, the dependent variables, and one of the controls employed to avoid confounding.
  • The Validity of Experimental Research
  • Give two examples of mistakes that result in a loss of statistical conclusion validity.
  • Use a study of the effects of TV violence on children’s aggression to illustrate the meaning of construct validity, as it applies to experiments.
  • What is the “college sophomore” problem and how does it relate to the validity of an experiment?
  • How does the distinction between individualist and collectivist cultures relate to an experiment’s validity?
  • Using memory research as an example, explain what is meant by ecological validity.
  • Comment on the relative importance of internal versus external validity.
  • In general, what characterizes an experiment said to be high on internal validity?
  • Threats to Internal Validity
  • Using the example of a program designed during the first semester of college to reduce test anxiety, explain how the internal validity of a study could be reduced by either history or maturation.
  • Give an example of regression to the mean. How can it affect a study’s internal validity?
  • Distinguish between testing and instrumentation as threats to the internal validity of a study.
  • What is a subject selection effect and how did it affect the validity of the “ulcers in executive monkeys” study?
  • How might attrition reduce an experiment’s internal validity? In what sense can an attrition effect be seen as similar to a subject selection effect?

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