Case Study

Explain how a between-subjects design would address the researcher's concerns regarding the persistence of the relaxation effect and the limited testing time per participant.

Case context: A researcher is developing a study to compare the efficacy of two different therapeutic stress-relief exercises. The researcher is concerned that if a participant does the first exercise, the relaxation effect will persist and influence their response to the second exercise. Additionally, the researcher has a very limited time slot for testing each participant.

Question: Explain how a between-subjects design would address the researcher's concerns regarding the persistence of the relaxation effect and the limited testing time per participant.

Sample answer: A between-subjects design addresses the persistence concern because each participant is exposed to only one stress-relief exercise, which naturally avoids carryover effects and eliminates the need for counterbalancing. It also addresses the time constraint because testing each participant in only one condition demands less testing time per participant compared to testing them in both.

Key points:

  • Exposing participants to only one condition avoids carryover effects (the persistence of the relaxation effect).
  • Testing a single condition per participant demands less testing time per participant.
  • Eliminating the need for counterbalancing simplifies the study design.

Rubric: Full credit is awarded if the explanation connects the between-subjects design to: (1) avoiding carryover effects (the persistent relaxation effect) by exposing participants to only one condition, and (2) reducing testing time per participant. Partial credit is given if only one of these points is explained.

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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