Short Answer

Design a new research study that applies the archival methodology of the implicit egotism study to see if a similar name-matching preference occurs with cities instead of states. Specify the database you would use, what you would count, and what specific finding would support the concept of implicit egotism.

Question: Design a new research study that applies the archival methodology of the implicit egotism study to see if a similar name-matching preference occurs with cities instead of states. Specify the database you would use, what you would count, and what specific finding would support the concept of implicit egotism.

Sample answer: I would analyze a database of municipal address records to count the frequency of people with city-matching names (e.g., individuals named Austin or Charlotte) who reside in cities with similar names (e.g., Austin or Charlotte). A finding that people are disproportionately likely to live in or move to cities that resemble their own names would support implicit egotism.

Key points:

  • Application of the archival method using a municipal or address database.
  • Specification of counting frequencies of individuals whose names match their city names.
  • Stating that a disproportionate frequency of name-city matches supports implicit egotism.

Rubric: The response must apply the archival method to a city context by identifying a relevant municipal database, explaining that they would count name-city frequency matches, and stating that finding a disproportionate likelihood of matching relocations would support implicit egotism.

0

1

Updated 2026-05-27

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

Related