Practice Effect
A practice effect is a specific type of carryover effect in within-subjects experiments where participants perform a task better in later experimental conditions. This improvement occurs not because of the experimental manipulation, but simply because the participants have gained experience and had the opportunity to practice the task during earlier conditions.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
OpenStax Psychology (2nd ed.) Textbook
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Not a representative sample
More likely to cheat
May not get a random sample
Practice Effect
Fatigue Effect
Practice Effect
Context Effect
Rule of Thumb for Experimental Design Choice
In a taste-testing experiment, participants first drink a highly sweetened, strongly flavored soda and then immediately taste a mild, lightly flavored sparkling water. If the intense sweetness of the first drink temporarily dulls their taste buds and alters how they perceive the sparkling water, what is this confounding variable called?