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Samenvatting - Applied Research Methods D&H (SOW-PSB3RS45E)

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complete summary of all ARM D&H study questions. Answers have been fully extracted from the lectures and articles. Extra questions and answers have been added to the file that were talked about a lot during the lectures.

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January 22, 2024
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General topics

 Which types of research can be conducted with observations, correlations, and
experiments, respectively?
o Observations —> finding phenomena
o correlations —> finding relationships
o experiments —> finding causal relationships
o all of them —> testing theories of experience and behavior
 What is meant by the precision of a theory?
o That an experiment should make precise predictions
 What is meant by the parsimony of a theory?
o That you choose the simplest theory that fits with the evidence
 Why are testability and falsifiability considered important features of a theory?
o It must be possible to test and prove a theory wrong. if a theory is always right, it
is worthless.
 What is the internal validity of a study?
o If the intervention rather than a confounded variable caused the results
 What is the external validity of a study?
o How far can the results be generalized?
 What is the construct validity of a study?
o Which aspects of the intervention caused the results?
 What is the statistical validity of a study?
o Are the statistical conclusions, correct?  most often the statistics are right, but
the conclusions are wrong.
 How can correlations be used and interpreted?
o Correlation: direction and size, regression: prediction
 How can correlations not be interpreted?
o Just because one variable predicts the other, does not mean that it causes the
other.
 Does correlation imply causality? If yes, why? If not, why not?
o No, it does not. the relation is not symmetric.
 Does causality imply correlation? If yes, why? If not, why not?
o Yes, causality implies correlation
 How does the temporal order of two variables help to establish a causal relation
between them?
o Temporal order does not prove causality. If A is the cause of B, A must happen
before B.
o Untrue: If A happens before B, then A is the cause of B. THIS IS UNTRUE. it
can be right but does not have to be.
o Correlation is a necessary, but not a sufficient precondition for causation!!
 What do you have to do to test whether two variables are causally related?
o Conduct an experiment!
 What are independent, dependent, and control variables of experiments?
o Independent variable is manipulated by the experimenter
 How many levels are there of the variable?

, o Dependent variable is measured by the experimenter (behavior, subjective
experience, physical response)
 Beware of the floor effects and ceiling effects! (everyone behaves the
same way)
o Control variables are controlled by the experimenter
 hold them constant
 turning them into independent variables
 What does it mean if an experimental independent variable is a between-subjects
variable?
o every subject experience only one level of the independent variable  random
assignment!
o by using random assignment, you prevent all the pitfalls of an experiment
o random assignment only works if you have two large groups (1000+)  then
there will be no significant differences between the two groups. with every group
that is smaller, you have to check the small things (age)
 What does it mean if an experimental independent variable is a within-subjects
variable?
o every subject experience every level of the independent variable: order effects?
o no groups have to be equal because everyone experiences everything
o maybe the order is important, so use random assignment to assign half the group
to one variable first, and the other group to experience the other variable first 
then, compare the outcomes.
 What are advantages and disadvantages of between-subjects and within-subjects
experimental designs?
o disadvantages:
 we have to take people as they come  this is no longer an experiment; it
is quasi-experimental.
 you can say that there is a relationship, but you cannot determine
the cause of this relationship
 if we do lab research, we don’t know if it is generalizable to everyday life
(external validity)
 we cannot generalize from an analogue population to a general population
 low sample size  low statistical power
 What is random assignment, and why is it so very important?
o when you randomly assign a population to a level/variable. it is really important
because you have no influence on who experienced what. it makes it more
generalizable to a population, only if you are using large sample sizes (1000+)
o it reduces selection and allocation biases. all groups are initially similar on
observed and unobserved characteristics
 What is the difference between a quasi-experiment and a real experiment?
o quasi experiments do not rely on random assignment. subjects are assigned to
groups based on non-random criteria

Statistical Power

 In statistical testing, what is the alpha error?

, o False positive conclusion  rejecting null hypothesis when it is actually true
 In statistical testing, what is the beta error?
o false negative conclusion  failing to reject null hypothesis when it is false
 What does the term "effect size" mean?
o a number that illustrates how big an effect is (difference, correlation, relationship)
 What does the term "statistical power" mean?
o what is the probability that this effect will be statistically significant in an
experiment?
o different experiments will have different power
 What does it mean when the statistical power of a study is small or large,
respectively?
o
 In which situations is it important to consider the power of studies?
o
 How is Cohen's effect size value d computed?
o difference between the two means of the two groups of the two conditions,
divided by the standard deviation.
 What are the conventional values of d for small, medium, and large effects,
respectively?
o small: 0,2
o medium: 0,5 (because we usually find it
o large: >0,8 (doesn’t really happen)
 Which factors affect the statistical power of a study?
o effect size:
 larger effects are easier to find
o sample size
 effects are easier to find with many participants
o alpha error
 increasing the alpha error (type I) reduces beta error (type II)
 usually not an alternative
 How can the power of a study be increased?
o effect size:
 larger effects are easier to find
o sample size
 effects are easier to find with many participants
 Which effect size values are usually used together with t-tests, ANOVAs, and
correlations?
o t-Test: d
o ANOVA:
 f (f=d/2)
 partial eta2 (percentage of explained variance)
o correlation: r (Pearson’s correlation coefficient)
 Why is the correlation a particularly simple and useful effect size value?
o the nearer it gets to 1 or -1, the larger your effect size  the stronger the relation
is between the two variables that you are correlating
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