AP Psychology Unit 2 Organizer Research Methods (8
Transcription
AP Psychology Unit 2 Organizer Research Methods (8
AP Psychology Unit 2 Organizer Research Methods (8-10%) OBJECTIVES: differentiate types of research (e.g. experiments, correlational studies, survey research, naturalistic observation, case studies) with regard to purpose, strengths and weaknesses describe how research design drives the reasonable conclusions that can be drawn (e.g. experiments are useful for determining cause and effect; the use of experimental controls reduces alternative explanations) identify independent, dependent, confounding, and control variables in experimental designs distinguish between random assignment of participants to conditions in experiments and random selection of participants, primarily in correlational studies and surveys predict the validity of behavioral explanations based on the quality of research design (e.g. confounding variables limit confidence in research conclusions) distinguish the purposes of descriptive statistics and inferential statistics apply basic descriptive statistical concepts, including interpreting and constructing graphs and calculating simple descriptive statistics discuss the value of reliance on operational definitions and measurement in behavioral research identify how ethical and legal guidelines (e.g. those provided by the American Psychological Association [APA], federal regulations, local institution review boards) protect research participants and promote sound ethical principles KEY TERMS/CONCEPTS: scientific method hypothesis replicate naturalistic observation observer effect participant observation laboratory observation case study survey representative sample population correlation correlation coefficient experiment operational definition independent variable dependent variable Hawthorne effect confounding variables experimental group control group random assignment placebo effect experimenter effect single-blind study double-blind study stereotype sample statistics descriptive statistics central tendency measures of variability frequency distribution histogram polygon normal curve/bell curve skewed distribution negatively skewed positively skewed bimodal distribution measure of central tendency mean outliers median mode bimodal range standard deviation inferential statistics statistically significant t-test significant difference ethics Essential Understanding: 1. Observation is the most important aspect of psychological research. 2. Operationalize means to define our variables in the manner in which we are going to measure them. 3. Correlation measures the degree of the relationship between variables and ranges from -1 to +1. 4. Correlation does not imply causation. 5. Independent variables are controlled by researchers, while dependent variables are what researchers are measuring. (Remember, dependent variable is dependent upon the independent variable.) 6. Experimental, correlational, and descriptive methods all have strengths and weaknesses in describing human behavior. 7. Descriptive statistics describe the data gathered in research, while inferential statistics allows us to draw conclusions about how this data can be generalized to a larger population. 8. Following ethical principles is vitally important in any kind of psychological research. (This has been emphasized on recent AP exams.) Comprehension Questions Chapter 1 As you read pages 20-51, stop and check your understanding of the material and apply your knowledge of psychology to answer the following questions. You will answer these questions on a separate sheet of looseleaf. Please put a proper heading on your paper. 1. What are the steps in using the scientific method? 2. Describe how psychologists use case studies, naturalistic observation, and surveys to observe and describe behavior. Identify advantages and disadvantages of each research method. 3. Why is random sampling important? 4. Describe positive and negative correlations. 5. Explain how correlational measures can aid the process of prediction but not provide enough evidence of cause-effect relationships. 6. Describe the characteristics of experimentation that make it possible to isolate cause and effect. 7. Why, when testing a new drug to control blood pressure, would we learn more about its effectiveness from giving it to half of the participants in a group of 1000 than to all 1000 participants? 8. Describe the three measures of central tendency, and what is the relative usefulness of the two measures of variation? 9. How do we know whether an observed difference can be generalized to other populations? 10. Describe the ethical guidelines that safeguard human and animal research participants.