Deck 15: More About Other Specialized Designs
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Deck 15: More About Other Specialized Designs
1
A primary disadvantage of a longitudinal design is ______.
A) the amount of time it takes to conduct the study
B) that cohort/generation effects are likely to be present
C) that confounding variables cannot be controlled as well as in cross-sectional designs
D) they are nearly impossible to conduct due to attrition
A) the amount of time it takes to conduct the study
B) that cohort/generation effects are likely to be present
C) that confounding variables cannot be controlled as well as in cross-sectional designs
D) they are nearly impossible to conduct due to attrition
the amount of time it takes to conduct the study
2
A small-n design that involves baseline measurements of behavior as compared with measures of behavior during the implementation of a treatment is called ______.
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A
C) baseline
D) reversal
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A
C) baseline
D) reversal
baseline
3
A developmental psychologist compares standardized math test scores for 2nd, 5th, and 10th graders. The subjects are all tested at the same time, thus, different groups of subjects are tested, each group at a different age. This study utilizes a(n) ______ design.
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) experimental
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) experimental
cross-sectional
4
Developmental designs that treat age as a between-subjects variable are called ______ designs.
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
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5
A researcher measured behavior before a treatment is implemented to compare with the behavior after the treatment has been implemented, is a ______.
A) confounding variable
B) baseline measurement
C) cohort-sequential design
D) quasi-experiment
A) confounding variable
B) baseline measurement
C) cohort-sequential design
D) quasi-experiment
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6
Mathematical description of behavior is often a common goal of ______ designs, which is possible with the large number of measurements collected of basic behaviors.
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A
C) baseline
D) reversal
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A
C) baseline
D) reversal
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7
The example of ______ is not a use of a small-n design.
A) a researcher wishes to test the effect of a treatment on an individual
B) test a mathematical description of behavior
C) a behavior that does not differ across individuals very much is examined
D) a researcher wishes to test the effect of a treatment on 1,000 participants
A) a researcher wishes to test the effect of a treatment on an individual
B) test a mathematical description of behavior
C) a behavior that does not differ across individuals very much is examined
D) a researcher wishes to test the effect of a treatment on 1,000 participants
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8
Cross-sectional designs are more likely to be affected by ______ as a source of bias than are longitudinal designs.
A) testing effects
B) attrition/mortality
C) cohort/generation effects
D) order effects
A) testing effects
B) attrition/mortality
C) cohort/generation effects
D) order effects
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9
Ebbinghaus used a ______ design to develop the forgetting law of memory.
A) quasi-experimental
B) small-n
C) covariate
D) between-subject
A) quasi-experimental
B) small-n
C) covariate
D) between-subject
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10
A-B-A design is also called ______.
A) discrete trials
B) reversal design
C) baseline
D) A-B-A-B design
A) discrete trials
B) reversal design
C) baseline
D) A-B-A-B design
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11
A small-n design that involves a large number of trials completed by one or a few individuals and conducted to describe basic behaviors is called ______.
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A
C) baseline
D) reversal
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A
C) baseline
D) reversal
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12
A researcher measures time on task behavior for a student who has been referred by their teacher. Then the researcher implements a new reward system for the student to determine if the reward system increases time on task behavior. Time on task behavior is then measured a second time without the treatment to determine if the behavior returns to pretreatment levels. This study uses a ______ design.
A) A-B-A-B
B) discrete trials
C) A-B-A
D) both A-B-A-B and discrete trials
A) A-B-A-B
B) discrete trials
C) A-B-A
D) both A-B-A-B and discrete trials
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13
There are three main types of developmental designs that treat the factor of age in a different way including all but ______.
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
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14
A cohort/generation effect may occur when ______.
A) people who know each other are subjects in the same study
B) a cross-sectional design is conducted
C) a time-series design is used
D) a Latin Square design is used
A) people who know each other are subjects in the same study
B) a cross-sectional design is conducted
C) a time-series design is used
D) a Latin Square design is used
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15
The ______ design is often preferable to either a longitudinal or a cross-sectional design.
A) within-subjects
B) between-subjects
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
A) within-subjects
B) between-subjects
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
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16
The ______ effects occur when participants' experience in one condition affects their behavior in another condition of a study.
A) testing
B) attrition/mortality
C) cohort/generation
D) carryover
A) testing
B) attrition/mortality
C) cohort/generation
D) carryover
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17
A cohort-sequential design handles some of the sources of bias present in other developmental designs by ______.
A) manipulating age as an independent variable
B) examining age effects both longitudinally and cross-sectionally
C) removing all possible cohort/generation effects
D) all of these
A) manipulating age as an independent variable
B) examining age effects both longitudinally and cross-sectionally
C) removing all possible cohort/generation effects
D) all of these
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18
______ may occur in cross-sectional designs due to different experiences that different generations have.
A) Testing effects
B) Attrition/mortality
C) Cohort/generation effects
D) Carryover
A) Testing effects
B) Attrition/mortality
C) Cohort/generation effects
D) Carryover
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19
Because there are no group means to present in ______ designs, data are often presented for the individual participants in the study.
A) small-n
B) between-subjects
C) case study
D) experimental
A) small-n
B) between-subjects
C) case study
D) experimental
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20
In a longitudinal design age is treated as a ______ variable, but age is treated as a ______ variable in a cross-sectional design.
A) within-subjects; within- and between-subjects
B) within- and between-subjects; between-subjects
C) within-subjects; between-subjects
D) between-subjects; within-subjects
A) within-subjects; within- and between-subjects
B) within- and between-subjects; between-subjects
C) within-subjects; between-subjects
D) between-subjects; within-subjects
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21
Participants may get tired of being in the study, or they may move and lose contact with the researchers. This is called ______.
A) attrition
B) erosion
C) corrosion
D) deterioration
A) attrition
B) erosion
C) corrosion
D) deterioration
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22
Dr. Clark observes his client's sleep difficulties for a period of 2 weeks to establish a baseline. He then institutes an intervention and measures the client's sleep difficulties for 2 weeks. The intervention is removed for a period of 2 weeks and then implemented again, and measurements are taken. This design is best described as ______.
A) A-B
B) A-B-A
C) A-B-A-B
D) A-B-B-A
A) A-B
B) A-B-A
C) A-B-A-B
D) A-B-B-A
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23
A psychologist measures a student's disruptive behavior to determine the behavior rate that currently exists. This is an example of ______.
A) baseline measurement
B) initial measurement
C) behavior measurement
D) existing measurement
A) baseline measurement
B) initial measurement
C) behavior measurement
D) existing measurement
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24
The main disadvantage to ______ is that the results cannot always be generalized to people outside the study.
A) small-n
B) between-subjects
C) case study
D) experimental
A) small-n
B) between-subjects
C) case study
D) experimental
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25
A basic behavioral processes study such as the way that information is forgotten in memory is an example of ______ design.
A) discrete trials
B) longitudinal
C) small-n
D) between-subjects
A) discrete trials
B) longitudinal
C) small-n
D) between-subjects
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26
In the ______ design, each participant is tested only once, which reduces the chance of attrition.
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
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27
The ______ designs are typically used to study very basic behaviors (e.g., sensory processes, learning processes), where the behaviors being measured should be very similar from person to person, and for studies where the goal is to tailor a treatment to a specific person.
A) small-n
B) between-subjects
C) case study
D) experimental
A) small-n
B) between-subjects
C) case study
D) experimental
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28
______ can occur for tasks that may affect future performance over time.
A) Testing effects
B) Attrition/mortality
C) Cohort/generation effects
D) Carryover effects
A) Testing effects
B) Attrition/mortality
C) Cohort/generation effects
D) Carryover effects
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29
In longitudinal within-subjects variable design each participant experiences ______ of the independent variable.
A) baseline measures
B) testing effects
C) all levels
D) generation effects
A) baseline measures
B) testing effects
C) all levels
D) generation effects
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30
The ______ designs compare different age groups of participants, where each participant contributes data for only one age group.
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
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31
Carryover effects can occur for tasks that may affect future performance over time.
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32
If younger and older adults are tested with a survey presented on a computer, it is possible that the older adults may have more difficulty completing the survey because some may lack experience with computers. This is an example of ______.
A) testing effects
B) attrition/mortality
C) cohort/generation effects
D) carryover
A) testing effects
B) attrition/mortality
C) cohort/generation effects
D) carryover
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33
Some of the earliest studies in psychology used ______.
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A designs
C) baseline designs
D) reversal designs
A) discrete trials
B) A-B-A designs
C) baseline designs
D) reversal designs
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34
Because the researcher collects data from all age groups at the same time, the study can be completed more quickly with a ______ design.
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
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35
In A-B-A design, the first A indicates ______.
A) the baseline measure of behavior
B) the treatment
C) the number of participants
D) the number of conditions
A) the baseline measure of behavior
B) the treatment
C) the number of participants
D) the number of conditions
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36
Whereas a ______ study takes time to complete because researchers must wait for the participants to age, it allows researchers to compare ages quickly with the first testing of the different-aged samples.
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
A) longitudinal
B) cross-sectional
C) cohort-sequential
D) causal
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37
Small-n designs are sometimes called ______ designs.
A) multiple subject
B) single subject
C) two subject
D) limited subject
A) multiple subject
B) single subject
C) two subject
D) limited subject
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38
Repeated baseline measurements help improve the ______ of a single-subject study.
A) ecological validity
B) generalizability
C) internal validity
D) sample's representativeness
A) ecological validity
B) generalizability
C) internal validity
D) sample's representativeness
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39
______ occur when the experiences of one generation (e.g., growing up with or without computers) are very different from those of another generation and affect the way the participants complete the task or measure in the study.
A) Testing effects
B) Attrition/mortality
C) Cohort/generation effects
D) Carryover effects
A) Testing effects
B) Attrition/mortality
C) Cohort/generation effects
D) Carryover effects
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40
______ can be a source of bias in the study if the participants who drop out are different from the participants who remain.
A) Attrition
B) Erosion
C) Corrosion
D) Deterioration
A) Attrition
B) Erosion
C) Corrosion
D) Deterioration
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41
Discuss cohort-sequential designs and give an example.
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42
Describe the primary source of bias present in cross-sectional designs.
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43
Some of the earliest studies in psychology used the discrete trials type of small-n design.
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44
Describe the primary sources of bias present in longitudinal designs.
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45
In a small-n design, a researcher is typically testing a theory about how a behavior works for most individuals or testing a treatment for a problematic behavior of an individual or group of individuals.
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46
Increasing the length of time between the last baseline measurement and the first intervention measurement is an effective way to decrease the likelihood of history influencing participants' scores.
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47
What is discrete trials design and explain how it has been important historically in psychological research.
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48
Discuss data analysis in small-n designs.
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49
The goal of a small-n study is to understand an individual's behavior, either to better describe the behavior as it occurs for many individuals or in order to change that behavior.
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50
Using a small number of participants makes it easier for a researcher to control for extraneous factors.
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51
In a longitudinal design, participants are tested at different ages in their lives.
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52
In a longitudinal design, participants are tested at different ages in their lives.
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53
The cross-sectional design solves many of the problems that can occur with longitudinal designs.
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54
Discrete trials designs tend to achieve stable measures of behavior with high ecological validity.
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55
Longitudinal designs allow researchers to examine age effects quickly by testing subjects at different ages all at once.
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56
Cohort-sequential designs begin with separate samples of different age groups.
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57
In small-n designs, participants' experiences in the treatment condition can affect their later behavior in a second baseline condition that follows the treatment condition.
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58
Explain why small-n designs are also experiments.
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59
Being tested on the measures early in the study can affect the later testings as participants' scores may show effects of practice or fatigue.
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60
An advantage of longitudinal design is attrition.
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