Short Answer

Analyze why finding consistent outcomes across five separate studies does not necessarily validate a research conclusion if all five studies share the same methodological limitation (e.g., the directionality problem).

Question: Analyze why finding consistent outcomes across five separate studies does not necessarily validate a research conclusion if all five studies share the same methodological limitation (e.g., the directionality problem).

Sample answer: Consistent outcomes across multiple studies do not validate a conclusion if all the studies share the same limitation. The consistency may merely be an artifact of that shared vulnerability rather than a genuine effect, meaning the studies do not provide independent converging evidence.

Key points:

  • Consistency is not valid evidence if it arises from a shared vulnerability.
  • The outcome might be an artifact of the shared limitation (like the directionality problem).
  • Studies with shared flaws fail to provide independent converging evidence.

Rubric: The answer must analyze how shared limitations affect consistency. It should explain that the consistent outcome might be an artifact of the shared vulnerability (e.g., the directionality problem) rather than a genuine effect, thereby failing to support the conclusion.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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