Essay

Define the methodological practice of blinding in experimental research and list the two specific types of unintended variation it is designed to minimize.

Question: Define the methodological practice of blinding in experimental research and list the two specific types of unintended variation it is designed to minimize.

Sample answer: Blinding is a methodological practice in which the experimenters, the participants, or both remain unaware of the research question or the specific condition to which each participant has been assigned. Its primary purpose is to minimize two types of unintended variation: experimenter expectancy effects and participant expectations.

Key points:

  • Blinding keeps experimenters, participants, or both unaware of the research question or condition assignments.
  • Blinding is used to minimize unintended variation in experiments.
  • Specifically minimizes experimenter expectancy effects.
  • Specifically minimizes participant expectations.

Rubric: The student must define blinding as keeping the experimenters, participants, or both unaware of the research question or specific condition assignments. They must also identify both experimenter expectancy effects and participant expectations as the sources of unintended variation being minimized.

0

1

Updated 2026-05-26

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

Related