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A researcher is investigating the 'bystander effect' and aims to achieve high construct validity by isolating the specific phenomenon of 'diffusion of responsibility.' They must decide how to structure their conditions to best operationalize their research question. Arrange the following research designs in order from the one that provides the LEAST evidence of construct validity (1) to the one that provides the MOST evidence (3) for isolating this specific phenomenon.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Objective and Subjective Measures
A researcher aims to study the effectiveness of a new mindfulness program on reducing 'workplace stress' in employees. To measure stress, the researcher only records the employees' daily caffeine consumption, hypothesizing that lower caffeine intake signifies lower stress. Based on this methodology, what is the most significant concern regarding the study's conclusions?
Darley and Latané's Operationalization of Diffusion of Responsibility
Operationalization
Prioritizing Validities
What does construct validity primarily assess in a psychological research study?
If a researcher's experimental setup accidentally measures a broad social behavior instead of the specific psychological mechanism they intended to study, the research is said to have high construct validity.
A researcher is investigating the 'bystander effect' and aims to achieve high construct validity by isolating the specific phenomenon of 'diffusion of responsibility.' They must decide how to structure their conditions to best operationalize their research question. Arrange the following research designs in order from the one that provides the LEAST evidence of construct validity (1) to the one that provides the MOST evidence (3) for isolating this specific phenomenon.
A researcher is designing a study on 'diffusion of responsibility' and must evaluate how different experimental structures impact construct validity. Match each design strategy with the specific analytical impact it has on the quality of the study's operationalization.
A researcher is designing an experiment to investigate whether 'anonymity' increases 'unethical behavior.' Their initial design compares a group of participants wearing opaque hoods (Anonymity Condition) to a group wearing no hoods (Control Condition). To create a design with high construct validity that isolates the specific phenomenon of 'anonymity' from the 'general physical sensation' or 'distraction' of wearing a head covering, which additional condition should they implement?
In psychological research, the construct validity of an experimental design depends heavily on the structure and number of its conditions. Match each type of design strategy with the correct description of its impact on construct validity.
A research design demonstrates high _____ validity when its experimental manipulations accurately operationalize the core research question and clearly isolate the specific phenomenon of interest.
A researcher evaluates a design comparing one participant to two others and determines it is inadequate because it fails to isolate 'diffusion of responsibility' from 'general social inhibition.' This judgment regarding the quality of the experimental manipulation identifies a deficiency in the study's _____ validity.
In a hypothetical two-condition version of Darley and Latané's bystander study—where participants are tested either alone or with exactly one other person—observing that helping decreases in the two-person condition is sufficient evidence to conclude that diffusion of responsibility, rather than general social inhibition, caused the reduction in helping behavior.
A research methods instructor asks students to critically evaluate the construct validity of a bystander-intervention experiment. Place the following evaluative steps in the correct order, from the first criterion to apply (1) to the final overall verdict (5).
Define construct validity in the context of psychological research. What does it primarily assess regarding a study's procedures, and under what conditions does a research design demonstrate high construct validity?
Explain why this specific two-condition experimental design resulted in lower construct validity. What alternative psychological phenomenon might this design demonstrate instead of diffusion of responsibility, and how would expanding the design address this issue?
You are designing an experiment to test a new conceptual research question and want to ensure high construct validity. Based on the relationship between experimental conditions and construct validity, how should you structure your conditions to isolate your phenomenon of interest while maintaining design efficiency?
What does construct validity primarily assess in a psychological experiment?
In an experimental design, continuously adding more conditions to a study will always continue to improve its construct validity.
A researcher is designing an experiment to study the effects of 'sleep deprivation' on cognitive performance. Match each experimental design choice to its likely impact on the study's construct validity.
A researcher is designing an experiment to investigate the specific phenomenon of diffusion of responsibility. To ensure high construct validity, arrange the researcher's design decisions in the logical sequence required to effectively isolate the phenomenon.
Imagine you are on a scientific review board evaluating a proposed study on 'diffusion of responsibility.' The proposal relies on testing only two conditions: a subject alone versus a subject with one other person. You judge that the experimental manipulation is flawed because it does not clearly isolate the specific phenomenon from general social inhibition. You reject the design because it fails to accurately operationalize the core conceptual research question, meaning the proposed study suffers from poor ____ validity.
A research design demonstrates high ____ validity when the variables are manipulated in a way that clearly isolates the specific phenomenon of interest.
When evaluating a study's construct validity, why might an experimental design testing only two conditions (e.g., a participant alone versus a participant with a single confederate) be considered flawed?
A researcher wants to study 'social exclusion' and assigns participants to either play a digital game where other avatars ignore them, or play the same game where avatars interact normally. Critics point out that the game in the ignored condition frequently glitches and freezes, causing general frustration rather than specifically isolating the feeling of social exclusion. If true, these glitches mean the experimental manipulation suffers from low construct validity.
Analyze how the number of conditions in an experimental design impacts its construct validity. Match each experimental design choice to its corresponding effect on how accurately the study operationalizes its core concept.
Evaluate the construct validity of the following experimental designs intended to study 'diffusion of responsibility'. Arrange them in order from the most flawed design (lowest construct validity, placed first) to the most optimal design (highest construct validity, placed last).