Preview Extract
CHAPTER 2: The Methods of Social Psychology
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Dr. Goldstein hopes to reveal that although some of the findings presented in her class may seem
obvious, students would not have predicted them accurately. To do so, she asked her students to take a
guess about the results of a study before describing the outcome. Many of the studentsโ predictions
were wrong. Dr. Goldstein is demonstrating what to her students?
a. the prediction bias
c. external validity
b. the hindsight bias
d. internal validity
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.1A
DIF: Easy
MSC: Applying
REF: The Value of Social Psychology Research
2. In her social psychology course, Maria learns that the more one is exposed to something, such as a
song on the radio, the more one tends to like it. Maria thinks this so obvious and questions why she
signed up for the class. What might Maria be displaying?
a. random sampling
c. the hindsight bias
b. biased sampling
d. the learning bias
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.1A
DIF: Easy
MSC: Applying
REF: The Value of Social Psychology Research
3. All of the following are examples of resources used in archival research EXCEPT
a. police records.
c. firsthand observations of behavior.
b. newspaper articles.
d. databases.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Remembering
4. Interviews and written questionnaires are forms of which type of research method?
a. observation
c. applied
b. archival
d. survey
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Remembering
5. A social psychologist finds a relationship between socioeconomic status and relationship satisfaction
in married couples. This study most likely describes which type of research method?
a. observational
c. experimental
b. archival
d. correlational
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Easy
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
6. Dr. Samanta is interested in how personality changes over adolescence. She enrolls a sample of
ten-year-olds and follows them through age seventeen. This kind of study is known as a(n) ________
study.
a. observational
c. cross-sectional
b. longitudinal
d. mixed design
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Easy
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
7. Experiments are different from other research methods in that they encompass which of the following
components?
a. self-selection
c. random sampling
b. two variables
d. random assignment
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Easy
MSC: Analyzing
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
8. The independent variable in an experiment is
a. manipulated and is the hypothesized cause of a particular outcome.
b. measured and is the hypothesized effect.
c. based on self-selection.
d. an indication of the degree of the relationship between two variables.
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Remembering
9. In an experiment, the control condition
a. does not include an independent variable.
b. is run before the experimental condition.
c. is compared with the experimental condition.
d. does not include a dependent variable.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
10. The primary difference between natural experiments and standard experiments is that natural
experiments
a. do not involve independent variables.
b. do not involve dependent variables.
c. typically involve random assignment of individuals.
d. typically do not involve random assignment of individuals.
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Analyzing
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
11. Which of the following best describes a research study that randomly assigns people to different
conditions and carefully controls all of the other circumstances so that they will be the same across the
two conditions?
a. experiment
c. survey
b. correlation
d. observation
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
12. When random sampling is used, it means that
a. participants are equally likely to be assigned to one condition or another.
b. every member of a population has an equal chance of being selected.
c. some members of a population are more likely than others to be selected.
d. participants are assigned to different conditions based on a particular trait or variable.
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Remembering
13. Which of the following is the best example of observational research?
a. living with a group of people and observing their behavior
b. reviewing historical records to find trends in behavior patterns
c. examining the relationship between two variables
d. recording participantsโ responses on questionnaires
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
14. Which of the following would be an example of random sampling in a survey study designed to learn
more about the student body at a particular college?
a. asking students to fill out a survey in a campus magazine and then mailing it to the
investigators
b. tossing a coin to determine who will be surveyed from a list of all students enrolled
c. surveying all customers who visit a particular coffee shop on campus
d. surveying fraternity and sorority members on campus
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Analyzing
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
15. What is one of the most important differences between correlational and experimental research
designs?
a. Experiments measure the degree of the relationship between two variables.
b. Correlations only examine one variable.
c. Experiments use random assignment.
d. It is impossible to determine cause by doing an experiment.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Analyzing
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
16. Which of the following correlations indicates the weakest relationship between two variables?
a. 1.0
c. โ 0.6
b. 0.8
d. 0.2
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2C
DIF: Easy
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
17. Which of the following scatterplot graphs displays the strongest relationship between two variables?
a.
c.
b.
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2C
d.
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
18. Which of the following research methods is the best way to identify a causal relationship between two
variables?
a. observational
c. correlational
b. archival
d. experimental
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Moderate
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
19. An experiment by Darley and Batson (1973) looked at seminary studentsโ willingness to help. In one
condition, participants were made to hurry from one building to another by being told they were late to
give a speech, which was part of the study requirements. In the other condition, participants were only
told to go over to another building in order to give the speech. Both groups encountered a person lying
on the ground on their way to the other building. The experimenter observed the participants from both
groups and counted the number of people who stopped to check on the person lying on the ground. It
was found that the participants who were in a hurry stopped much less frequently than the participants
who were not in a hurry. In this experiment, what was the independent variable?
a. being made to hurry from one building to another or not
b. the person lying on the ground
c. the number of people stopping to check on the person lying on the ground
d. going from one building to another
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
20. A researcher measures the galvanic skin response (GSR), or degree of sweating, of people holding a
clear plastic jar containing a spider. She compares the GSRs of people with spider phobias with the
GSRs of people without spider phobias. In this experiment, the galvanic skin response functions as the
a. independent variable.
c. control condition.
b. dependent variable.
d. experimental condition.
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
21. The problem with self-selection in research is that
a. people often choose the experimental condition in which they want to participate.
b. people often overestimate their own contributions to the research.
c. it makes causal interpretations difficult.
d. it violates ethical guidelines.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.2C
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Evaluating
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
22. A study shows that people who watch the local evening news believe the world is more dangerous than
people who do not watch the evening news. On the basis of this study, a newspaper reporter concludes
that watching the evening news causes people to believe the world is more dangerous than it actually
is. This is a flawed conclusion because
a. the reporter has a bias because he works for the newspaper.
b. it confuses a correlational relationship with a causal relationship.
c. it fails to compare evening news viewers with newspaper readers.
d. one study does not provide enough evidence to make this type of conclusion.
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.2C
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Evaluating
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
23. A biased sample would most likely result in which of the following?
a. invalid conclusions based on the survey results
b. a violation of ethical principles in research
c. valid interpretation of the survey results
d. too small a sample size to make a valid conclusion
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Moderate
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
24. It is very common for magazines to conduct surveys in which readers voluntarily fill out survey cards
and mail the cards to the publisher. The main problem with conducting a survey in this manner is that
a. some of these surveys will be lost by the postal service.
b. people are not truthful when filling out anonymous surveys.
c. mail-in surveys are generally not as effective as surveys conducted over the Internet.
d. people who respond to the survey are likely to be different from those who do not respond.
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Evaluating
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
25. Experiments are the best research method for finding causal relationships between variables because
they incorporate ________ and ________ into their design.
a. control conditions; self-selection
b. control conditions; random assignment
c. external validity; dependent variables
d. independent variables; informed consent
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Moderate
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
26. Random assignment is an important aspect of experiments because it
a. allows for more statistically significant results.
b. is consistent with institutional review board policies.
c. ensures fairness because everyone has an equal chance for selection in the study.
d. cancels out individual differences and reduces selection biases between conditions.
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Moderate
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
27. If a research group plans to conduct a survey poll about an upcoming presidential election in the
United States, what is a best guess regarding the minimum percentage of all likely voters that will be
needed to obtain a reasonably accurate estimation of voter opinion, assuming that a random sample is
obtained?
a. 2 percent
c. 50 percent
b. 20 percent
d. 80 percent
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
28. You read the results of a survey that reports that two-thirds of Cosmopolitan readers lost weight by
โgoing vegan.โ You should not give the report of this survey much credence because
a. Cosmopolitan readers are disinterested in participating in surveys.
b. readers were not properly assigned to control and experimental conditions.
c. readers who responded to the survey are not likely the same as those who did not.
d. Cosmopolitan readers are overly eager to participate in surveys.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.2B
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Evaluating
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
29. Which of the following is a limitation of correlational research?
a. We can never be sure about causality.
b. The strength of the relationship cannot be inferred.
c. Independent variables can be manipulated.
d. Self-selection of participants is not a problem.
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2C
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Evaluating
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
30. Which of the following indicates the strongest relationship between variables?
a. โ 0.9
c. โ 0.6
b. + 0.8
d. โ 0.2
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2C
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
31. An experiment that is set in the real world, and in which the participants themselves are usually
unaware that they are participating in a research study, is usually described as a
a. longitudinal study.
c. field experiment.
b. laboratory experiment.
d. correlational study.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Easy
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Remembering
32. One of the primary reasons field experiments are conducted is that they
a. are logistically very easy to carry out.
b. are very high in external validity.
c. incorporate a high degree of consistency across conditions.
d. usually result in statistically significant results.
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Moderate
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
33. Dr. Lee runs a study to test whether people with low self-esteem prefer to spend time with someone
who evaluates them more negatively rather than someone that evaluates them more positively. Dr. Lee
hopes that this study will contribute to the broader research on self-verification, which argues that
people have a strong desire for others to see them in ways consistent with how they see themselves.
Dr. Leeโs study tests ________ , whereas the total research on self-verification tests ________.
a. internal validity; reliability
c. a theory; a hypothesis
b. reliability; internal validity
d. a hypothesis; a theory
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2A
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
34. A hypothesis ________ , while a theory ________.
a. is tested by a specific study; encompasses a body of related research
b. encompasses a body of related research; is tested by a specific study
c. is tested scientifically; is not tested scientifically
d. is not tested scientifically; is tested scientifically
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2A
DIF: Easy
MSC: Analyzing
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
35. Which of the following is the best example of a correlational research study?
a. Researchers assigned participants to do either a stressful task or an easy task and then
measured their blood pressure.
b. Researchers compared the blood pressure of participants that were trained to reduce stress
by meditating and participants that were trained to reduce stress by drawing.
c. Researchers measured the stress levels in participants that were given a blood pressure
drug and participants that were given a placebo drug.
d. Researchers measured the association between participantsโ blood pressures and their
degrees of chronic stress.
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.2C
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Analyzing
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
36. As they walked down the street, participants (unaware they were part of a study) were approached by a
confederate posing as a panhandler (i.e., a person begging for money). The confederate asked the
participant for either seventy-five cents or for whatever change he or she had handy. The researchers
compared how much money participants gave across these two conditions. This is best characterized
as which type of research design?
a. a field experiment
c. a correlational study
b. a natural experiment
d. a longitudinal study
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.2D
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Applying
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
37. If an experiment produces reliable results, what does this mean?
a. There is a low probability of obtaining these results by chance alone.
b. The independent variable had a strong effect on the dependent variable.
c. It is likely to yield the same results on repeated occasions.
d. There is a strong correlation between some measurement and what that measurement is
supposed to predict.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.3A
DIF: Easy
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Remembering
38. When there is a high correlation between a measurement instrument and the outcomes that the
instrument is supposed to predict, this instrument is said to be high in
a. measurement validity.
c. reliability.
b. internal validity.
d. statistical significance.
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.3A
DIF: Easy
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Remembering
39. If a social psychology experiment is conducted that has very little relation to real-life experiences or
situations, this experiment would be low in
a. external validity.
c. reliability.
b. internal validity.
d. statistical significance.
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.3A
DIF: Easy
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Understanding
40. When an experiment has poor internal validity, which of the following might be of concern?
a. The results of the experiment may not relate to real-world situations.
b. It might be difficult to determine if the independent variable was what produced the result.
c. The observed results may not be statistically significant.
d. The results may not be practically significant.
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.3A
DIF: Moderate
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Understanding
41. Social psychologists will often run pilot studies that are very similar to actual experiments that they
intend to run later but that differ in that participants are used as consultants to check that the
experiment instructions are understandable, that the scenarios are believable, and so forth. Running a
pilot study such as this particularly helps to increase the ________ of an experiment.
a. external validity
c. measurement validity
b. internal validity
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.3A
d. statistical significance
DIF: Difficult
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Understanding
42. Random assignment is a crucial component of experiment design. Failing to use random assignment
when placing participants into groups would have the strongest effect on the ________ of an
experiment.
a. external validity
c. measurement validity
b. internal validity
d. statistical significance
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.3A
DIF: Difficult
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Understanding
43. A social psychologist conducts an experiment and finds a statistically significant result. This means
that the
a. probability of obtaining this finding by chance alone is less than some quantity.
b. probability of obtaining this finding by chance alone is greater than some quantity.
c. experiment is very high in external validity.
d. experiment is very low in external validity.
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.3B
DIF: Difficult
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Understanding
44. High school seniors were given a test that is supposed to predict scholastic performance during the
first year of college. When the results were analyzed, however, there was no correlation between the
test scores and first-year performance. This is an example of poor
a. statistical significance.
c. measurement validity.
b. reliability.
d. internal validity.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.3A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
45. In an experiment, a statistically significant result depends the most on which two factors?
a. the size of the difference between groups and the validity of the experiment
b. the size of the difference between groups and the number of cases on which it is based
c. the validity of the experiment and the number of cases on which it is based
d. the validity of the experiment and the number of dependent variables the study used
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.3B
DIF: Difficult
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Remembering
46. An intervention is a(n)
a. debriefing conducted at the conclusion of an experiment.
b. punishment delivered to a person.
c. effort to change a personโs behavior.
d. measure taken by psychologists to minimize bias in study results.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.4A
DIF: Easy
REF: Basic and Applied Science
MSC: Remembering
47. A group of social psychologists are working on a research project with the aim of promoting condom
use as a way to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. This type of research project is
probably best described as ________ science.
a. basic
c. pseudob. applied
d. hard
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.4A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF: Basic and Applied Science
48. Research in basic science aims to
a. solve real-world problems, without concern about understanding the phenomena in its own
right.
b. understand simple questions in science.
c. solve difficult questions in science.
d. understand a phenomenon in its own right without concern with real-world issues.
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.4A
DIF: Easy
REF: Basic and Applied Science
MSC: Remembering
49. The social psychologist Carol Dweck found that people who believe that intelligence is a matter of
hard work actually study harder in school and get better grades. She used this finding to design an
academic success program targeted for minority junior high school students. What does this illustrate
about the connection between basic and applied research?
a. Basic research always has to come before applied research.
b. Applied research is not useful without also engaging in basic research.
c. Basic and applied research should not be conducted by the same person.
d. Basic research can lead to theories used to design applied interventions.
ANS: D
OBJ: 2.4A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Analyzing
REF: Basic and Applied Science
50. Pooja conducts a study as part of her honors thesis in psychology and finds a surprising result. Before
publishing the finding in a psychology journal, Pooja wants to be more confident that it did not happen
by chance. What should Pooja consider doing?
a. debriefing her participants
b. rerunning the study to see if the result replicates
c. contacting the IRB
d. rerunning the study, this time using deception
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.4B
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Applying
REF: Basic and Applied Science
51. When a researcher runs the same study a second time to see if he or she gets the same results, he or she
is attempting to
a. evaluate the internal validity of the study.
b. evaluate the external validity of the study.
c. replicate the results.
d. improve the results.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.4B
DIF: Easy
REF: Basic and Applied Science
MSC: Understanding
52. An institutional review board (IRB) has reviewed a study and determined that participating in the
study will likely make the participants feel uncomfortable and embarrassed. Could the IRB allow the
researchers to begin this study?
a. No; making participants uncomfortable is never acceptable.
b. Yes; the IRB examines only whether participants will be in physical pain.
c. Yes; as long as participants are not overly harmed and the research has significant value.
d. No; if any aspects of research studies are harmful in any way, IRBs cannot allow them.
ANS: C
DIF: Moderate
REF: Ethical Concerns in Social Psychology Research
OBJ: 2.5A
MSC: Remembering
53. The function of an IRB is to review
a. university research spending.
b. grant proposals, to ensure that they are financially feasible.
c. research proposals and judge the ethical appropriateness of the research.
d. the reliability of research findings at the institution.
ANS: C
OBJ: 2.5A
DIF: Easy
REF: Ethical Concerns in Social Psychology Research
MSC: Remembering
54. A person volunteered to participate in an experiment but was not told anything about what the
experiment involved until after it was finished. The failure to inform this person about the experiment
violates which ethical principle in research?
a. institutional review board
c. deception research
b. informed consent
d. debriefing
ANS: B
OBJ: 2.5A
DIF: Moderate
MSC: Applying
REF: Ethical Concerns in Social Psychology Research
55. Debriefing participants after an experiment is completed is always an important step in the
experimental procedure. However, debriefing is particularly important when
a. deception is used.
b. an institutional review board has not reviewed the study.
c. a monetary reward is given.
d. informed consent has not been obtained.
ANS: A
OBJ: 2.5A
DIF: Moderate
REF: Ethical Concerns in Social Psychology Research
MSC: Remembering
SHORT ANSWER
1. Jamal is taking a course in social psychology and learns about the Milgram Experiment, in which the
majority of participants administered potentially fatal shocks to another person when an experimenter
told them to do so. After class, he thinks to himself that the results are really not that surprising. He
most certainly would have guessed that people are willing to hurt others if someone tells them to.
Describe what bias to which Jamal is potentially falling prey.
ANS:
Jamal is falling prey to the hindsight bias. This is the tendency for people to be overconfident about
whether they could have predicted a given outcome.
DIF: Difficult
OBJ: 2.1A
REF: The Value of Social Psychology Research
MSC: Applying
2. Describe the difference between a natural experiment and a true experiment conducted in the
laboratory.
ANS:
In a natural experiment, a naturally occurring event creates somewhat different conditions (before and
after) that can be compared. This comparison can be done with nearly as much rigor as in a true
experiment in which the researcher manipulates conditions. A natural experiment differs from a true
experiment because there is no random assignment.
DIF: Easy
OBJ: 2.2D
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Analyzing
3. Describe the following research methods in social psychology: observational, archival, and survey.
What are the advantages and disadvantages of each method?
ANS:
Several advantages and disadvantages are acceptable including those outlined below. Observational
research involves observing participants at a close range and recording aspects of their behavior.
It allows researchers to study people in real-life situations but can often be misleading as the
researchersโ presence may alter the situation. Archival research involves examining archives of various
kinds. It allows researchers to discover broad patterns of behavior but cannot reveal causal
relationships between variables. Survey research involves administering interviews and questionnaires. It may be easy to conduct, but it is also prone to random sampling errors.
DIF: Moderate
OBJ: 2.2B
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Evaluating
4. What is the goal of correlational research? What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of this
type of research?
ANS:
Correlational research evaluates whether a relationship exists between two or more variables. Several
advantages and disadvantages are acceptable. For example, researchers can rely on correlational
methods to evaluate the relationship between variables when it is unethical or impossible to randomly
assign participants to conditions. However, correlational research cannot reveal causal relationships
between these variables.
DIF: Moderate
OBJ: 2.2C
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Evaluating
5. What are the advantages and disadvantages of experimental research compared with other types of
research methods (observational, archival, survey, and correlational)?
ANS:
Several advantages and disadvantages are acceptable, including the following: As compared to all
other research methods, experiments alone allow researchers to determine causal relationships between
variables. However, researchers must rely on these other methods when it is impossible or unethical to
randomly assign participants to conditions. Moreover, in order to have a carefully controlled
experiment, external validity may sufferโmeaning that the results of the experiment may not
generalize to real-life settings.
DIF: Moderate
OBJ: 2.2B
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Evaluating
6. Describe the necessary components of a true experiment.
ANS:
Several answers are acceptable, including the following: A true experiment involves randomly
assigning participants to experimental and control conditions. The only difference between these
conditions must be the level of the independent variable.
DIF: Easy
OBJ: 2.2D
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Understanding
7. Why is random sampling so important to conducting research in social psychology? What are some of
the potential pitfalls of not having a random sample?
ANS:
Random sampling is important when researchers are trying to understand the beliefs or attitudes of a
particular population. In this process, every person in the population has an equal chance of being
chosen. This helps to ensure that the sample tested reasonably captures the proportions of different
types of people in the population of interest. If the sample is biased in some way, the proportions of
different types of people in the sample may be skewed, and as such, their responses may not do a good
job of approximating responses in the population.
DIF: Difficult
OBJ: 2.2B
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Evaluating
8. Explain the difference between hypotheses and theories.
ANS:
A hypothesis is a prediction about what will happen under particular circumstances. Typically a
hypothesis is tested by a specific study. In contrast, a theory is a body of related propositions intended
to describe some aspect of the world. Theories are more general than hypotheses but also typically
have the support of empirical data. They may encompass the results of many studies.
DIF: Difficult
OBJ: 2.2A
REF: How Social Psychologists Test Ideas
MSC: Analyzing
9. What does it mean when there is a statistically significant relationship between two variables?
ANS:
A statistically significant relationship between two variables means that the probability of finding that
relationship by chance is unlikely (typically less than 5 percent).
DIF: Difficult
OBJ: 2.3B
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Understanding
10. Describe the types of concerns that an investigator might have about conducting a study with poor
external validity.
ANS:
External validity refers to how closely the experimental setup resembles real-life situations. If a study
has low external validity, any conclusions drawn from the research cannot generalize to contexts
beyond those of the study itself.
DIF: Moderate
OBJ: 2.3A
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Understanding
11. Compare and contrast external validity and internal validity.
ANS:
Both external and internal validity are concerned with whether a study measured something
meaningful. External validity focuses on whether the results that emerge during the controlled
environment of a research study actually relate to how the processes unfold in other situations. Do the
results generalize outside of the laboratory? In contrast, internal validity considers whether the
manipulated, or independent, variable is indeed responsible for the results. Was there a confound in the
design? Did random assignment work? Did the participants understand the instructions? If either form
of validity is lacking, the researchers may not have measured something meaningful.
DIF: Difficult
OBJ: 2.3A
REF: More Concepts for Understanding Research
MSC: Analyzing
12. Dr. Gupta reads a colleagueโs research report and is very surprised by the results. She decides to run
the study herself, using the exact same procedures. Dr. Gupta does not get the same results and
confronts her colleague about this issue. Describe the process in which Dr. Gupta is engaging and
consider its importance for social psychology and science more generally.
ANS:
Dr. Gupta is attempting to replicate the results of her colleagueโs study. She is running the study a
second time, using the original procedures, to confirm whether the same results emerge. This process
is important to social psychology, as well as science more generally, as the results of replication
attempts suggest whether a finding, particularly a surprising one, should be accepted by the field or be
challenged.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Applying
REF: Basic and Applied Science
OBJ: 2.4B
13. Describe the difference between basic science and applied science.
ANS:
Basic science is research concerned with trying to understand some phenomenon in its own right.
Here, the focus is on building theories about the way the world works. In contrast, applied science is
research concerned with solving real-world problems.
DIF: Difficult
MSC: Analyzing
REF: Basic and Applied Science
OBJ: 2.4A
14. What are the benefits of conducting a debriefing after the conclusion of a study, for both the
investigator and the participant?
ANS:
Debriefing participants involves explaining the purpose of the experiment and the knowledge gained.
Several answers regarding the benefits of debriefing are acceptable, including the following:
Debriefing is useful for the investigator, particularly during pilot studies, for determining whether the
instructions and setup of the study were clear and reasonable. Debriefing is also an opportunity to
educate participants regarding the questions studied, the research processes more generally, and how
the research may contribute to society.
DIF: Moderate
OBJ: 2.5A
REF: Ethical Concerns in Social Psychology Research
MSC: Remembering
15. What is the purpose of an IRB? What must the board consider?
ANS:
An IRB examines research proposals and makes judgments about their ethical appropriateness. The
members of the board must consider both the discomfort and harm caused to participants as well as the
value of the scientific information obtained.
DIF: Difficult
OBJ: 2.5A
REF: Ethical Concerns in Social Psychology Research
MSC: Understanding
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