Short Answer

An experimenter tests whether a new memory-training technique (manipulated, with random assignment) and a participant's age (non-manipulated) affect recall ability. They discover that older participants perform worse on the recall task. Can they conclude that aging causes a decline in recall ability based on this study? Explain in one to three sentences.

Question: An experimenter tests whether a new memory-training technique (manipulated, with random assignment) and a participant's age (non-manipulated) affect recall ability. They discover that older participants perform worse on the recall task. Can they conclude that aging causes a decline in recall ability based on this study? Explain in one to three sentences.

Sample answer: No, they cannot conclude that aging causes a decline in recall. Because age is a non-manipulated variable and participants cannot be randomly assigned to age groups, the relationship is strictly correlational and may be driven by an unmeasured third variable.

Key points:

  • Causal conclusions cannot be drawn for the participant's age.
  • Age is a non-manipulated variable lacking random assignment.
  • The observed relationship is strictly correlational and susceptible to a third-variable explanation.

Feedback: Causal conclusions can only be drawn for manipulated independent variables where random assignment is possible. Since age is non-manipulated, any observed difference in recall is strictly correlational and could be due to unmeasured third variables.

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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