IB psychology research terminology
Interview plan
A plan for conducting an interview plan
Representative sample
A sample that represents a population
Self-selected sampling
A sampling method made up of volunteers
Cross-cultural validity
A term used when asking if the research is relevant to other cultures or if it is ethnocentric
Ecological validity
A term used when asking if the study represents what happens in real life
Artificiality
A term used when the situation created is so unlikely to occur that one has to wonder if there is any validity in the findings
Snowball sampling
A type of sampling where participants recruit other participants among their friends and acquaintances
Triangulation
Combining different research methods in order to achieve richer data
Opportunity sampling
Convenience sampling, a sample of whoever happens to be there and agrees to participate
Application
How a theory or empirical study is used
The ethical guidelines in IB psychology
Informed consent, deception, debriefing, withdrawal from a study, confidentiality, protection from physical or mental harm
Sampling bias
Involves problems with generalizing findings to a larger population
Random sampling
Is a type of sampling where every member of the target population has an equal chance of being selected. Putting all the names in a hat
The experiment
Is performed under highly controlled conditions, with the goal of establishing cause-and-effect relationship between two variables
A negative correlation
Means that when one variable increases, the other decreases
Double blind control
Not only the participants do not know whether they are in the treatment or control group, but also the person carrying is left out on what the aim of the study is
Researcher bias
Observer bias, when the experimenter sees what he/she is looking for
Null hypothesis
Predicts that there will be no results or that the result will be due to chance
Experimental hypothesis
Predicts the relationship between the IV and the DV
The field experiement
The experiment takes place in a natural environment, but the researchers still manipulate variables
Target population
The group whose behaviour the researcher wishes to investigate
Single blind control
The participants do not know what the study is about
Participants
The people who take part in a psychological study
Aim
The purpose of a study indicating which behaviour or mental process will be studied
Procedure
The step-by-step process used by the researcher to carry out the study
Dependent variable
The variable that is being measured after the manipulation of the independent variable
Independent variable
The variable that the researcher deliberatly manipulates
Findings
These state how the researcher interpreted the data that were collected
Stratified sample
This type of sample draws random samples from each subpopulation within the target population
To generalize
To assume that the behaviours observed in the random sample are representative of those in the larger population
Confounding variable
Undesirable variables that influence the relationship between the indpendent and dependent variable
Deductive approach
When a claim is tested against empirical evidenct so that it can be either accepted or rejected
A positive correlation
When both variables are affected in the same way
Correlational studies
When data are collected which show a relationship between two variables
Interviewer effects
When for example the interviewer responds to age, sex, or ethnicity
Demand characteristics
When participants act differently because they know that they are in an experiment
Participant bias
When people adjust their responses to what they think is appropriate for the interviewer
Social desirability bias
When people want to present a positive image of themselves, and not be entirely truthful in their responses
Hawthorne effect
When the participants try to guess the aims of the study and act accordingly
Inductive approach
When the variables are not defined in advance, but the resarcher first gathers data and then sees what they could mean
A natural experiment
An experiment where the researchers have no control over the variable
Participant variability
Something which is important to consider when choosing a sample in order to avoid an overrepresentation of tratits that can bias the outcome of the study
