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A social psychologist is investigating the average daily screen time of 'all university students in Canada.' To conduct the study, they collect data from 450 students at a large university in British Columbia. Match each research concept to the specific component of this study it describes.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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In a study on talkativeness, a researcher measures the daily word count of a few hundred university students to draw conclusions about men and women in general. What does the group of university students represent in this research design?
Based on the example of the talkativeness study, arrange the steps of the research process in the correct logical order, starting with the group of interest and ending with the final inference.
In the talkativeness study example, the researcher's ability to draw a valid conclusion about 'men and women in general' is logically dependent on whether the university students (the sample) are representative of the broader population.
Suppose you are tasked with creating a new research architecture to investigate the 'daily stress levels of all public school teachers in a large city.' Following the logic of using a manageable subset to represent a larger group, which of the following sampling designs would you construct?
In the talkativeness study example, the researcher collects data from 'men and women in general' to draw conclusions about the 'few hundred university students.'
A researcher uses a sample of university students to make a claim about the talkativeness of 'men and women in general.' When evaluating the strength of this claim, a scientist must determine if the specific sample is _____ of the broader population.
A social psychologist is investigating the average daily screen time of 'all university students in Canada.' To conduct the study, they collect data from 450 students at a large university in British Columbia. Match each research concept to the specific component of this study it describes.
A researcher investigates talkativeness by recruiting 350 first-year students at a large state university and recording how many words each participant speaks during a 30-minute conversation. The researcher then publishes conclusions about the talkativeness of 'adults in the United States.' Match each element of this study to its correct methodological role.
In the talkativeness study, measuring the speech of a few hundred university students is only scientifically meaningful if those students are _____ of men and women in general; without this property, any pattern observed in the data cannot be safely attributed to the broader population.
A critic wants to judge whether the talkativeness researcher's conclusions about 'men and women in general' are actually justified, given that the data came only from a sample of university students. Place the following evaluative steps in the most defensible logical order, from the first judgment the critic should make to the final verdict.