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Imagine you are running a pilot test for a new psychological study and discover that participants can easily guess your research question. How should you apply this finding to your study design before beginning the actual experiment, and why is this step necessary?
Question: Imagine you are running a pilot test for a new psychological study and discover that participants can easily guess your research question. How should you apply this finding to your study design before beginning the actual experiment, and why is this step necessary?
Sample answer: You should apply this finding by adjusting the study's procedure to remove or minimize the cues that reveal your hypothesis. This step is necessary to prevent these demand characteristics from skewing the results of the actual experiment.
Key points:
- Adjust or modify the study procedure to eliminate cues.
- Make adjustments before conducting the actual experiment.
- Prevent demand characteristics/cues from skewing the actual experiment's results.
Feedback: Correct answers should state that the researcher should adjust the procedure to eliminate the cues before the actual experiment begins, and explain that this is necessary to prevent these cues/demand characteristics from skewing the actual experiment's results.
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KPU
Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Imagine you are running a pilot test for a new psychological study and discover that participants can easily guess your research question. How should you apply this finding to your study design before beginning the actual experiment, and why is this step necessary?