The science of psychology (Kap 2) EJ PÅ TENTAN

The exercise was created 2020-10-03 by jossan103. Question count: 39.




Select questions (39)

Normally, all words in an exercise is used when performing the test and playing the games. You can choose to include only a subset of the words. This setting affects both the regular test, the games, and the printable tests.

All None

  • hypothesis a specific prediction about some phenomenon or other
  • theory a set of formal statements that explains how and why certain events are related to one another
  • Variable any characteristics or factor that can vary
  • operational definition defines a variable in terms of the specific procedures used to produce or measure it
  • unobtrusive measure records behaviour in a way that keeps participants unaware that they are being observed
  • archival measure record or document that already exists
  • descriptive research seeks to identify how humans and other animals behave, particularly in natural settings
  • case study an in-depth analysis of an individual, group or event
  • naturalistic observation the researcher observes behaviour as it occurs in a natural setting
  • survey research information about a topic is obtained by administrating questionnaires or interviews to many people
  • population all the individuals that we are interested in drawing a conclusion about
  • representative sample reflects the important characteristics of the population
  • correlational research measures one variable (X), measures a second variable (Y), and statistically determines whether X and Y are related
  • correlation coefficient a statistic that indicates the direction and strenght of the relation between two variables
  • positive correlation higher scores on one variable are associated with higher scores on a second variable
  • negative correlation when higher scores on one variable are associated with lower scores on a second variable
  • scatterplots graphs that show correlation between two variables
  • independent variable the factor that is manipulated by the experimenter
  • dependent variable the factor that is measured by the experminter and may be influenced by the independent variable
  • experimental group the group that receives a treatment or an active level of the independent variable
  • control group is not exposed to the treatment or receives a zero level of the independent variable
  • random assignment procedure in which each participant has an equal likelihood of being assigned to any one group within an experiment
  • counterbalancing procedure in which the order of conditions is varied so that no condition has an overall advantage relative to the others
  • internal validity the degree to which an experiment supports clear casual conclusions
  • confounding of variables two variables are interwined in such a way that we cannot determine which one has influenced a dependent variable
  • demand characteristics cues that participants pick up about the hypothesis of a study or about how they are supposed to behave
  • placebo a substance that has no pharmacological effect
  • placebo effect people receiving treatment show a change in behaviour because of their expectations, not because the treatment itself had any specific benefit
  • external validity the degree to which results of a study can be generalized to other populations, settings and conditions
  • replication process of repeating a study to determine whether the original findings can be duplicated
  • descriptive statistics allow us to summarize and describe the characteristics of a set of data
  • mode the most frequently occuring score in a distribution
  • median the point that devides a distribution of scores in half when those scores are arranged in ordet from lowest to highest
  • mean the arithmetic average of a set of scores
  • range the difference between the highest and lowest scores in a distribution
  • standard deviation takes into account how much each score in a distribution differs from the mean
  • inferential statistics allow us to make inferences about a population from data provided by a sample of that distribution
  • statistical significance it is very unlikely that a particular finding occured by a chance alone
  • meta-analysis a statistical procedure for combining the results of different studies that examine the same topic

All None

Shared exercise

https://spellic.com/eng/exercise/the-science-of-psychology-kap-2-ej-pa-tentan.10009476.html

Share