Short Answer

A researcher wants to apply the results of the closed-track cell phone study to drivers navigating complex, multi-lane urban intersections. What critical comparison must the researcher make to establish the external validity of this application?

Question: A researcher wants to apply the results of the closed-track cell phone study to drivers navigating complex, multi-lane urban intersections. What critical comparison must the researcher make to establish the external validity of this application?

Sample answer: The researcher must compare the similarity of the closed oval track situation to the target population of complex, multi-lane urban driving situations. Because generalizability depends on this similarity, the researcher cannot assume the findings apply if the situations are too different.

Key points:

  • Compare the similarity of the studied situation (closed track) to the target real-world situations (urban intersections).
  • Determine if the single experimental situation adequately represents the target population of situations.
  • Establish that generalizability depends on the similarity between these situations.

Rubric: Grading Rubric: - 4 points: Explicitly mentions comparing the similarity between the studied situation (closed track) and the target situations (urban intersections). - 3 points: Connects this comparison to establishing generalizability or external validity. - 3 points: Indicates that applicability depends on the match between the experimental and real-world environments.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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