- When we perform an experiment, we
- measure independent variables,
- produce dependent variables.
- produce control variables.
- produce a comparison.
- hold independent variables constant.
- The control group in an experiment
- fixes the level of a variable across all experimental conditions.
- is often untreated.
- receives the same level of the independent variable as the experimental group.
- refers to the manipulation of the independent variable.
- In research on the decompression of pregnant rats, the independent variable is ______, a dependent variable is ________, and a control variable is _______________.
- Reduced air pressure; behavioral tests; strain of the rat
- Body weight; climbing ability; time of day
- Atmospheric pressure; age of rat; climbing ability
- Number of decompressions; body weight; home cage
- Experimental group; control group; test performance
- In experiments, independent variables are
- the result of careful measurements.
- extraneous to the experiment and held constant.
- extraneous to the experiment and allowed to vary randomly.
- independent of experimenter control.
- varied by the researcher.
- Dependent variables are
- manipulated by the researcher.
- potential independent variables that are held constant.
- measured by the researcher.
- probable behavioral causes.
- One reason a valid experiment may produce null results is
- the range of levels in the independent variable was insufficient to show an effect.
- the dependent variable reflects a broad range of performance.
- that the experiment is conducted in an environment that is too difficult.
- that reactivity occurs in the participants (e.g., they adopt the role of “good behavior”).
- In experiments, the independent variable should be _________, the dependent variable should be __________, and the control variable should be ________.
- controlled; constant; randomized
- constant; an effect; causal
- free; restricted; elevated
- balanced; unconfounded; an effect
- manipulated; measured; held constant
- An interaction occurs when
- an independent variable effects a dependent variable.
- one independent variable effects a second independent variable.
- the effect one dependent variable has is not the same at each level of a second dependent variable.
- the effect one independent variable has is not the same at each level of a second independent variable.
- Which of the following is an example of the Hawthorne effect?
- Experimenter bias
- Reactivity in an experiment
- Participant observation
- Unobtrusive outcomes
- A variable that inadvertently causes an experimental result is
- confounded with the dependent variable.
- confounded with the independent variable.
- confounded with the control variables.
- unlikely to be important in experiments.
- Construct validity permits one to do which of the following?
- Generalize
- Attribute causality
- Have confidence in constructs
- Support hypothesis
- Which of the following is a source of construct invalidity?
- Bias
- Random error
- Carry-over effects
- Counterbalancing
- If a study has external validity, one is entitled to
- generalize.
- attribute causality.
- have confidence in constructs.
- support hypotheses.
- Internal validity allows one to do which of the following?
- Generalize
- Attribute causality
- Have confidence in constructs
- Support hypotheses
- Which of the following is the most likely to have the greatest internal validity?
- Surveys
- Case studies
- Relational research
- Experiments
- Test reliability determined by a correlation between scores from the same test taken at two different times is called
- test-retest reliability.
- parallel forms reliability.
- split-half reliability.
- predictive reliability.
- Statistical reliability determines whether results
- will occur five percent of the time.
- occur because of chance.
- are internally valid.
- are produced by bias.
- Which of the following is a major threat to internal validity?
- Confounding
- Deviant-case analysis
- Truncated range
- Dependent variables
- A type of validity that is specifically concerned with being able to make causal statements about relationships between variables is _______________ validity.
- External
- Internal
- Construct
- Predictive
- A replication of research helps to determine ______________ validity.
- Construct
- External
- Internal
- Predictive