Deck 4: Causation, Classical Experiments and Quasi Experiments

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Question
What is a rival causal factor?
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Question
What is a spurious relationship?
Question
Name two types of threats to validity.
Question
Why is it not advisable to do many criminal justice studies in the laboratory setting?
Question
How can we reduce our chances of making a Type II error?
Question
In social science statistics, how confident do we like to be before we say we are comfortable rejecting the null hypothesis and declaring support for our research hypothesis?
Question
Why do we avoid stating that we "proved" anything in social science research?
Question
Name one technique that we can use with a quasi-experiment to get the experimental and comparison groups to be as comparable as possible.
Question
If we are studying juvenile delinquency by surveying the same group of students on the first Monday of March in school each year, explain how mortality will likely lead to a biased sample.
Question
Provide an example of why diffusion of treatment might occur in a criminal justice program.
Question
How does a factorial design differ from a classical experiment?
Question
How does reactivity generate problems for generalizability?
Question
Define correlation or association.
Question
If we find that variable A is correlated with variable B, what can we conclude?

A) A causes B
B) A might cause B, but we really don't know yet
C) B causes A
D) None of the above
Question
The _________ represents the researcher's prediction of what kind relationship there is between X and Y.

A) Null hypothesis
B) Research hypothesis
C) Theory
D) Inductive analysis
Question
The ________ predicts that there will not be a relationship between X and Y.

A) Null hypothesis
B) Research hypothesis
C) Theory
D) Inductive analysis
Question
If we find through statistical analysis that there does appear to be a relationship between X and Y, we__________.

A) Reject the null hypothesis
B) Accept the null hypothesis
C) Accept the research hypothesis
D) Reject the research hypothesis
Question
If it appears that ice cream and crime rates are related, but what is actually happening here is that both are related to weather patterns, what kind relationship do we have between ice cream and crime?

A) Causal
B) Incidental
C) Spurious
D) False
Question
For the social sciences, how confident do we like to be before we declare that we are ready to reject our null hypothesis?

A) 50%
B) 68%
C) 95%
D) 99%
Question
All of the following are necessary components of classical experiments EXCEPT:

A) Randomization
B) Experimental and control groups
C) Instrumentation
D) Pretests and posttests
Question
Which of the following is the strongest type of study?

A) Time series
B) One-group before-after design
C) Classical experiment
D) Two group posttest only design
Question
Factors other than the independent variable that might impact the dependent variable are known as:

A) Control groups
B) Threats to internal validity
C) Threats to external validity
D) Noise
Question
When we select people with extreme opinions or neighborhoods with very high crime rates, we are likely to see change regardless of any type of intervention we might introduce because of ________.

A) Statistical regression
B) History
C) Testing effects
D) Mortality
Question
_____________ involves a comparison or control group that tries to outperform the experimental group.

A) Demoralization
B) Compensatory equalization of treatment
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Diffusion of treatment
Question
In the classic Kansas City Preventive Patrol Experiment, police efforts to make their presence known in the reactive beats locations that were supposed to receive the least amount of police attention was known as _____________.

A) Demoralization
B) Compensatory equalization of treatment
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Diffusion of treatment
Question
What is the best way to combat the problem of statistical conclusion validity?

A) Run only multiple regression
B) Increase the sample size
C) Only work with random samples
D) Get a control group
Question
All of the following are problematic because they might hide the existence of an actual relationship between X and Y EXCEPT:

A) Compensatory equalization of treatment
B) Demoralization
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Diffusion of treatment
Question
The Solomon four-group design is best for avoiding which threat to internal validity?

A) Testing
B) History
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Statistical conclusion validity
Question
The ___________ is similar to a classical experiment but allows us to test more than two groups, so we can compare different types of interventions.

A) Quasi-experiment
B) Time series
C) Factorial design
D) Meta analysis
Question
People attempting to be more productive once they realize they are being supervised is called _______

A) Compensatory equalization
B) Compensatory rivalry
C) Generalizability
D) Hawthorne effect
Question
Which if the following is not a threat to internal validity?

A) Statistical regression
B) Noise
C) Mortality
D) Diffusion of Treatment
Question
It is easier to find causation between two variables than it is to find a correlation.
Question
An apparent association between X and Y that appears because both are actually correlated with Z is called a spurious relationship.
Question
Quantitative research is largely based on collection of anecdotal information.
Question
Classical experiments are considered to be better designs than quasi-experiments.
Question
Quasi-experiments involve random allocation of individuals to experimental and control groups.
Question
A time-series is a type of quasi-experiment.
Question
Classical experiments tend to be better at controlling threats to internal validity than addressing external validity.
Question
Multiple treatment interference is an external validity issue.
Question
Causation between two variables is easier to predict in the social sciences than in the natural sciences.
Question
What are the three requirements of causation?
Question
Explain how classical experiments are designed to address some threats to internal validity. What threats to internal validity remain a problem?
Question
Why is it a bad idea to draw conclusions about a subject based on individual cases or anecdotal information? What should we do instead? Provide a real-word example.
Question
The _________ hypothesis is what we actually test during statistical analysis.
Question
Large research studies tend to focus on ___________, while individuals who witness one event are likely to rely on _________ information.
Question
A ____________ is characterized by random assignment to experimental and control groups and pretests and posttests.
Question
A ___________ is similar to a classical experiment, except it is missing random assignment to treatment and control groups.
Question
________ is the change of data collection tools being used over time.
Question
The __________ allows us to test for not only a relationship between X and Y but also to see if the pretest generated any biases.
Question
_______ involves pairing people in the experimental group with those in the comparison group to get the two groups to be as similar as possible.
Question
A __________ is a type of quasi-experiment with several data collection points.
Question
Classical experiments tend to be stronger at minimizing threats to __________ validity than threats to __________ validity.
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Deck 4: Causation, Classical Experiments and Quasi Experiments
1
What is a rival causal factor?
Anything other than X that explains changes in Y.
2
What is a spurious relationship?
A relationship that is not real (example, Margarine consumption and divorce rates).
3
Name two types of threats to validity.
History, maturation, mortality, selection-maturation interaction, testing, selection bias, statistical regression, instrumentation, diffusion of treatment, compensatory equalization of treatment, demoralization, compensatory rivalry, uncertainty about time-order, statistical conclusion validity)
4
Why is it not advisable to do many criminal justice studies in the laboratory setting?
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5
How can we reduce our chances of making a Type II error?
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6
In social science statistics, how confident do we like to be before we say we are comfortable rejecting the null hypothesis and declaring support for our research hypothesis?
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Why do we avoid stating that we "proved" anything in social science research?
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k this deck
8
Name one technique that we can use with a quasi-experiment to get the experimental and comparison groups to be as comparable as possible.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
If we are studying juvenile delinquency by surveying the same group of students on the first Monday of March in school each year, explain how mortality will likely lead to a biased sample.
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10
Provide an example of why diffusion of treatment might occur in a criminal justice program.
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11
How does a factorial design differ from a classical experiment?
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12
How does reactivity generate problems for generalizability?
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13
Define correlation or association.
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14
If we find that variable A is correlated with variable B, what can we conclude?

A) A causes B
B) A might cause B, but we really don't know yet
C) B causes A
D) None of the above
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k this deck
15
The _________ represents the researcher's prediction of what kind relationship there is between X and Y.

A) Null hypothesis
B) Research hypothesis
C) Theory
D) Inductive analysis
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The ________ predicts that there will not be a relationship between X and Y.

A) Null hypothesis
B) Research hypothesis
C) Theory
D) Inductive analysis
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
If we find through statistical analysis that there does appear to be a relationship between X and Y, we__________.

A) Reject the null hypothesis
B) Accept the null hypothesis
C) Accept the research hypothesis
D) Reject the research hypothesis
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
If it appears that ice cream and crime rates are related, but what is actually happening here is that both are related to weather patterns, what kind relationship do we have between ice cream and crime?

A) Causal
B) Incidental
C) Spurious
D) False
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
For the social sciences, how confident do we like to be before we declare that we are ready to reject our null hypothesis?

A) 50%
B) 68%
C) 95%
D) 99%
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
All of the following are necessary components of classical experiments EXCEPT:

A) Randomization
B) Experimental and control groups
C) Instrumentation
D) Pretests and posttests
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Which of the following is the strongest type of study?

A) Time series
B) One-group before-after design
C) Classical experiment
D) Two group posttest only design
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Factors other than the independent variable that might impact the dependent variable are known as:

A) Control groups
B) Threats to internal validity
C) Threats to external validity
D) Noise
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
When we select people with extreme opinions or neighborhoods with very high crime rates, we are likely to see change regardless of any type of intervention we might introduce because of ________.

A) Statistical regression
B) History
C) Testing effects
D) Mortality
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
_____________ involves a comparison or control group that tries to outperform the experimental group.

A) Demoralization
B) Compensatory equalization of treatment
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Diffusion of treatment
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
In the classic Kansas City Preventive Patrol Experiment, police efforts to make their presence known in the reactive beats locations that were supposed to receive the least amount of police attention was known as _____________.

A) Demoralization
B) Compensatory equalization of treatment
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Diffusion of treatment
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
What is the best way to combat the problem of statistical conclusion validity?

A) Run only multiple regression
B) Increase the sample size
C) Only work with random samples
D) Get a control group
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
All of the following are problematic because they might hide the existence of an actual relationship between X and Y EXCEPT:

A) Compensatory equalization of treatment
B) Demoralization
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Diffusion of treatment
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The Solomon four-group design is best for avoiding which threat to internal validity?

A) Testing
B) History
C) Compensatory rivalry
D) Statistical conclusion validity
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Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The ___________ is similar to a classical experiment but allows us to test more than two groups, so we can compare different types of interventions.

A) Quasi-experiment
B) Time series
C) Factorial design
D) Meta analysis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 52 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
People attempting to be more productive once they realize they are being supervised is called _______

A) Compensatory equalization
B) Compensatory rivalry
C) Generalizability
D) Hawthorne effect
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Which if the following is not a threat to internal validity?

A) Statistical regression
B) Noise
C) Mortality
D) Diffusion of Treatment
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
It is easier to find causation between two variables than it is to find a correlation.
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k this deck
33
An apparent association between X and Y that appears because both are actually correlated with Z is called a spurious relationship.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Quantitative research is largely based on collection of anecdotal information.
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k this deck
35
Classical experiments are considered to be better designs than quasi-experiments.
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k this deck
36
Quasi-experiments involve random allocation of individuals to experimental and control groups.
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k this deck
37
A time-series is a type of quasi-experiment.
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k this deck
38
Classical experiments tend to be better at controlling threats to internal validity than addressing external validity.
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k this deck
39
Multiple treatment interference is an external validity issue.
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40
Causation between two variables is easier to predict in the social sciences than in the natural sciences.
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k this deck
41
What are the three requirements of causation?
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42
Explain how classical experiments are designed to address some threats to internal validity. What threats to internal validity remain a problem?
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k this deck
43
Why is it a bad idea to draw conclusions about a subject based on individual cases or anecdotal information? What should we do instead? Provide a real-word example.
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k this deck
44
The _________ hypothesis is what we actually test during statistical analysis.
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k this deck
45
Large research studies tend to focus on ___________, while individuals who witness one event are likely to rely on _________ information.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
A ____________ is characterized by random assignment to experimental and control groups and pretests and posttests.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
A ___________ is similar to a classical experiment, except it is missing random assignment to treatment and control groups.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
________ is the change of data collection tools being used over time.
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k this deck
49
The __________ allows us to test for not only a relationship between X and Y but also to see if the pretest generated any biases.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
_______ involves pairing people in the experimental group with those in the comparison group to get the two groups to be as similar as possible.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
A __________ is a type of quasi-experiment with several data collection points.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Classical experiments tend to be stronger at minimizing threats to __________ validity than threats to __________ validity.
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