Multiple Choice
Social Variables A double-blind experiment is not possible in studies like the hypothetical investigation of cartoons and children's art described in this chapter.Instead, an experimenter can take precautions like keeping the person who scores their drawings "blind" to their treatment condition, and standardizing testing and scoring procedures.These steps help control confounding due to
A) context variables.
B) experimenter bias.
C) Rosenthal effects.
D) subject selection threat.
Correct Answer:

Verified
Correct Answer:
Verified
Q41: Social Variables In single-blind experiments,<br>A)experimenters are unaware
Q42: Physical Variables Chase is designing an experiment
Q43: Personality Variables Volunteer subjects may differ from
Q44: Social Variables Rosenthal proposed all of these
Q45: Context Variables Timothy is a shy undergraduate
Q47: Physical Variables Tim prevented noise from distracting
Q48: Physical Variables Sometimes we cannot remove physical
Q49: Social Variables Tammy's experiment compared the effectiveness
Q50: Social Variables Single-blind experiments only control for<br>A)context
Q51: Social Variables _ is a form of