COn
C
ept Map
Chapter 1
What Is
p
sychology?
Chapter 1 What Is Psychology? 41
Research Methods in Psychology
Representative Samples
A representative sample is a group of partici-
pants that accurately represents the larger
population that the researcher is interested in.
Descriptive Studies: Establishing the Facts
- Case study: a detailed description of a particu-
lar individual, based on observation or formal
psychological testing. - Observational study: careful observation,
measurement, and recording of behavior
without intruding on the subjects. - Psychological tests: assessment instruments
that measure and evaluate personality traits,
emotional states, aptitudes, interest, abilities,
and values. - Surveys: questionnaires or interviews that ask
people directly about their experiences,
attitudes, or opinions.
Experimenter
manipulates
Subjects’ behavior depends
on what experimenter does
Independent
Variable
Dependent
Variable
affects
The Experiment: Hunting for Causes
- Experiments allow researchers to keep most aspects of a situation
constant, and manipulate an independent variable, to determine its
effects on a dependent variable.
Experiments usually require a control condition in which subjects
are not exposed to the experimental condition.
- Participation in an experimental or control group is determined by
random assignment. - Drug experiments typically include the use of a placebo, an
inactive substance used as a control.
Experimenter Effects
The expectations of participants can influence a study’s
results. To counteract this problem, experimenters may
conduct:
- A single-blind study, an experiment in which subjects
do not know whether they are in an experimental or a
control group. - A double-blind study, an experiment in which neither
the participants nor the experimenters know which
participants are in the control group and which are in
the experimental group until after the results are tallied.
Correlational Studies: Looking for Relationships
A positive or negative correlation is a measure of the strength of
a relationship between two variables.
- A coefficient of correlation summarizes the strength and
direction of a relationship. - A correlation does not establish cause and effect.
Evaluating the Findings
- Descriptive statistics (including the arithmetic mean and standard deviation) organize and summarize data.
- Inferential statistics help to determine how meaningful the findings are.
- Significance tests measure the probability that the study’s findings could have occurred by chance.
- Confidence intervals provide a range of values within which a true population mean is likely to lie.
- Interpretation of findings may need to await studies using different methods. For example, cross-sectional studies compare
subjects of different ages; longitudinal studies follow subjects over many years.
Group A
at age 20
Group A
at age 50
Group A
at age 80
Longitudinal Study
Same group compared at different times:
Cross-Sectional Study
Different groups compared at one time:
Group A (20-year-olds)
Group B (50-year-olds)
Group C (80-year-olds)
compared
- Statistical procedures can reveal the effect size, how powerful the independent variable is.
- Meta-analysis combines and analyzes data from many related studies to determine the explanatory strength of a particular
independent variable.
510152025
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Number of kumquats eaten
POSITIVE CORRELATION
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res on psychology exam
(a)
90 NEGATIVE CORRELATION
80
70
60
50
0
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510152025
Number of kumquats eaten
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0510152025
(b) Number of kumquats eaten(c)
ZERO CORRELATION
Sco
res on psychology exam