100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

AQA A-level Psychology Research Methods Summary

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
19
Uploaded on
31-05-2022
Written in
2021/2022

Condensed research methods with all you need to know in less than 20 pages

Institution
AQA










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Research methods
Uploaded on
May 31, 2022
File latest updated on
May 31, 2022
Number of pages
19
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Summary

Content preview

Experimental method
Experime - Manipulation of an IV to measure the effect on the DV
ntal
method
Lab - Highly controlled environment
experime - Manipulate IV and record effect on DV
nt - Strict control over extraneous variables = high internal validity by
ensuring the change in DV is the result of the IV
- High control = easier to replicate
- Lacks generalisability due to artificial tasks = low ecological and
external validity and mundane realism
- Demand characteristics
Field - Highly controlled environment
experime - Manipulate IV and record effect on DV
nt - Strict control over extraneous variables = high internal validity by
ensuring the change in DV is the result of the IV
- High control = easier to replicate
- Lacks generalisability due to artificial tasks = low ecological and
external validity and mundane realism
- Demand characteristics
Natural - Pre-existing IV which could change without the researcher who just
experime measures the effect on the DV
nt - Opportunity for unethical research
- High external and ecological validity
- Rare, limiting generalisability
- Conditions can’t be randomly allocated reducing the clarity of effect
on the IV and DV and makes research socially sensitive
Quasi - IV based on pre-existing differences between people – simply exists
experime and no manipulation is needed e.g. age, gender, anxiety
nt - Controlled conditions = high internal validity
- Cofounding variables can arise from lack of random allocation
Observational techniques
Naturalis - Setting behaviour would normally occur
tic - High external validity as findings generalise to everyday life
- Issues with replication because lack of control
- Control over extraneous variables is difficult
Controlle - Structured environment where some variables can be managed
d - Manipulates variables
- E.g. Strange Situation
- Control over extraneous variables = high internal validity
- Easier replication
- Low internal validity, restricting generalisability to real life
Covert - Without participant knowledge or consent
- Removes participant reactivity = natural behaviours and less risk of
demand characteristics
- Ethical issues = privacy and lack of informed consent
Overt - With participant knowledge or consent
- Ethical
- May produce unnatural behaviours, increased risk of demand
characteristics
Participa - Researcher becomes member of observed group

, nt - Increased insight into behaviour which may increase validity
- Loses objectivity if they identify too strongly with who they’re
studying
Non- - Researcher remains outside of observed group
participa - Maintains objective psychological distance as they don’t get too
nt involved or influence the findings
- May lose valuable insights
Self-report methods
Self-report - Involve participants explaining/stating feelings, opinions,
methods behaviours related to a topic
- Insight into reasons behind behaviour
Questionna - Pre-determined questions used to assess thoughts or experiences
ires - Can assess the DV
- Large sample = cost-effective
- Researcher doesn’t need to be present
- Closed questions easy to analyse
- Open questions provide depth
- Social desirability bias
- Demand characteristics
- Acquiescence bias may skew data
Interviews - Interviewer asks set of questions to assess interviewees thoughts
or experiences

Structured
- Pre-determined, fixed order, no deviation from questions
- Easy replication
- Standardised
- Lack of deviation is frustrating if more detail is needed

Unstructured
- No set questions
- Discuss general topic, participants allowed to elaborate their
answers
- Flexibility increases insight
- Difficult to analyse as there may be irrelevant information
- Social desirability bias – establish rapport to remove
Correlations
Correlation - Investigates association between two co-variables
s - Shows strength and direction of association between the variables
- Experiments manipulate the IV to measure the effect on the DV =
change on one variable
- Unlike experiments, correlations do not involve manipulation =
cannot establish cause and effect
- Useful tool allowing researchers to investigate ideas and make
suggestions for future research
- Quick and economical – no need for controlled environment, often
uses secondary data
- Can’t establish cause and affect
- Third variable may cause the correlation
- Often misinterpreted

, Content analysis
Content - Enables indirect study of behaviour by examining communications
analysis - Coding involves analysing communication by identifying the
occurrences of the categories e.g. counting the number of times a
word appears in a communication
- Use of secondary data avoids ethical issues = high external
validity
- Quantitative data = easy to analyse and collect
- Indirect study = may be analysed out of context
- Researcher bias – may only tally up words that support their
research, ignoring those that contradict
Case studies
Case - In-depth investigation into one group, institution or event
studies - Qualitative data
- Often longitudinal
- In-depth – increases understanding
- Gathers range of data
- Opportunity to conduct research
- Idiographic – used to generate future hypotheses
- Lacks generalisability – unique (low external validity), individual
differences, often representative samples
- Longitudinal can be time consuming
- Qualitative data hard to analyse
- Poor reliability due to lack of replication – can ensure inter-rater
reliability
Aims and hypotheses
Aim - General statement of what the researcher intends to investigate
- Purpose of the study
- Narrow the focus of the research to produce an aim, often
developed through theories
Hypothese - Clear, precise, testable statement that states the relationship
s between the variables to be investigated
- A hypothesis is a proposed explanation of something that has to
be verified and tested before it can be widely accepted as fact
while aim is the goal or the purpose of the process
- Ensure the IV and DV are clear and measurable
- State the relationship between the IV and the DV
- Select the appropriate hypothesis (directional/non-directional)
- E.g. of directional/one-tailed hypothesis – children who score over
50 on the confidence scale obey more instructions than children
who score under 50
- E.g. of a non-directional/two-tailed hypothesis – children who score
over 50 on the confidence scale differ from those who score below
50 in terms of how much they obeyed the teacher
Sampling

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
lilylogan101
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
170
Member since
5 year
Number of followers
91
Documents
0
Last sold
1 week ago

4.6

59 reviews

5
48
4
5
3
3
2
0
1
3

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions