Case Study

Based on this scenario, identify the design notation, state the total number of simple effects analyses that can be conducted, and explain how the levels of the independent variables determine this total number.

Case context: A psychologist studies the effects of treatment condition (active drug vs. placebo) and exercise frequency (none, moderate, or high) on anxiety levels. The psychologist wants to test the interaction by examining the simple effects.

Question: Based on this scenario, identify the design notation, state the total number of simple effects analyses that can be conducted, and explain how the levels of the independent variables determine this total number.

Sample answer: The study has a 2×32 \times 3 factorial design, with the treatment condition having 2 levels and exercise frequency having 3 levels. The total number of simple effects analyses that can be conducted is 55. This is because the number of simple effects equals the sum of the levels of all interacting independent variables (2+3=52 + 3 = 5), which represents conducting a separate analysis of each independent variable at every level of the other independent variable.

Key points:

  • Identifies the design as a 2×32 \times 3 factorial design.
  • Calculates the total number of simple effects as 55 (2+32 + 3).
  • Explains that a separate analysis of each independent variable is conducted at every level of the other independent variable.

Rubric: The answer should: 1. Identify the design as 2×32 \times 3 (or equivalent). 2. State that the total number of simple effects is 55. 3. Explain that this total is the sum of the levels of the independent variables (2+32 + 3) because each independent variable is analyzed at every level of the other variable.

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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