Case Study

Diagnose the methodological issue present in this study, and explain why the researcher cannot confidently conclude that positive mood caused the superior memory performance.

Case context: A researcher is conducting a study on how mood affects memory. Participants are assigned to either a positive mood or a negative mood group, and their memory is tested. The positive mood group performs significantly better. However, a post-experiment analysis reveals that the positive mood group has a substantially higher average IQIQ than the negative mood group.

Question: Diagnose the methodological issue present in this study, and explain why the researcher cannot confidently conclude that positive mood caused the superior memory performance.

Sample answer: The methodological issue is the presence of a confounding variable, specifically IQIQ. The researcher cannot conclude that positive mood caused the superior memory performance because the positive mood group's higher average IQIQ provides a systematic difference. This difference acts as an alternative explanation, leaving it unclear whether mood or intelligence caused the better memory scores.

Key points:

  • Identify IQIQ as the confounding variable in the study.
  • Explain that the group difference in IQIQ is systematic.
  • Describe how the confound provides a plausible alternative explanation for the results.
  • Conclude that a causal relationship between mood and memory cannot be confidently established.

Rubric: The student must correctly identify IQIQ as a confounding variable, explain that the average difference between groups is systematic, and show comprehension of how this confound provides an alternative explanation that blocks causal conclusions.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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