Psychology

?
  • Created by: DGSYEAR9
  • Created on: 03-02-19 09:32
Random Sampling
Everyone has an equal chance of getting chosen. Names put into a hat and pulled out
1 of 29
Opportunity Sampling
Participants that are at the place of experiment at time of investigation are chosen
2 of 29
Stratified Sampling
Proportional representation, broken down into sub groups. For example gender or age and take a random sample for each group
3 of 29
Volunteer Sampling
Participants put themselves forward after seeing an advert about the experiment
4 of 29
2 Weaknesses of opportunity
Not every member of the target popular may be available at the time. If the experiment was replicated it would be with different people
5 of 29
2 Strenghts of Opportunity
It is convenient at the time. It is the easiest and quickest way.
6 of 29
2 weaknesses of volunteer
There will not be and equal amount of participants form each target population. You will only get one type of person signing up (e.g. eager to join in)
7 of 29
2 strengths of volunteer
Participants would be motivated. Most ethical form of sampling method.
8 of 29
2 weaknesses of random
It can be time consuming. Too many people from specific subgroups may be selected.
9 of 29
2 strengths of random
Everyone has an equal chance of being chosen. There is no bias as there is no control over who is chosen.
10 of 29
2 weaknesses of stratified
Time consuming as the subcategories need to be identified. People can still refuse to take part.
11 of 29
2 strengths of stratified
Useful if a small subgroup of the target population may have been missed in random sampling. Ensures that the sample is completely representative of the target population.
12 of 29
Field experiment
Takes place in a natural environment. IV manipulated and measures DV.
13 of 29
2 weaknesses of field experiments
More extraneous variables. Ethical issues.
14 of 29
2 strengths of field experiments
Less demand characteristics. Have higher realism.
15 of 29
Give example of experimental null hypotheses
There will be no difference IV depending on the DV
16 of 29
Give example of experimental alternative hypotheses
There will be a difference in IV spending on DV
17 of 29
Correlation null hypotheses
There will be no correlation between the IV and the DV
18 of 29
Correlation alternative hypotheses
There will be a correlation between the IV and the DV
19 of 29
Natural experiments
In a real life environment. The IV is not manipulated. It occurs naturally. Normally past events
20 of 29
Strength of a natural experiment
More ethical as it is a past event and researchers have no say in the experiment
21 of 29
Weakness of a natural experiment
Extraneous variables are difficult to control
22 of 29
Case study
In depth investigation of an individual or a small group. Suitable for unique situations
23 of 29
Strength of a case study
Case study is more ethical
24 of 29
Weakness of a case study
They lack external validity
25 of 29
Directional hypotheses
Alcohol has a negative effect on reaction time
26 of 29
Non directional
Alcohol affects reaction time
27 of 29
Strengths of correlations
Can be repeated. Useful when studying relationships between variables.
28 of 29
Weaknesses of correlations
Cause and effect can not be established. A third variable could have affected results
29 of 29

Other cards in this set

Card 2

Front

Participants that are at the place of experiment at time of investigation are chosen

Back

Opportunity Sampling

Card 3

Front

Proportional representation, broken down into sub groups. For example gender or age and take a random sample for each group

Back

Preview of the back of card 3

Card 4

Front

Participants put themselves forward after seeing an advert about the experiment

Back

Preview of the back of card 4

Card 5

Front

Not every member of the target popular may be available at the time. If the experiment was replicated it would be with different people

Back

Preview of the back of card 5
View more cards

Comments

No comments have yet been made

Similar Psychology resources:

See all Psychology resources »See all Research methods and ethics resources »