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Providing financial compensation to participants eliminates the systematic differences in characteristics, such as education level and social class, between volunteers and non-volunteers in psychological research.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Volunteer Bias and External Validity
According to Rosenthal and Rosnow (1976), which of the following characteristics is more commonly found in individuals who volunteer for psychological research compared to those who do not?
Providing financial compensation to participants eliminates the systematic differences in characteristics, such as education level and social class, between volunteers and non-volunteers in psychological research.
A psychology researcher is analyzing the results of a study where all participants were volunteers. Match each characteristic typically found in volunteer subjects with the specific way that trait might bias or influence the study's data.
A researcher is investigating 'The Impact of Prosocial Behavior on Professional Success' using a voluntary participant pool. Sequence the following events to demonstrate the logical progression of how the systematic characteristics of volunteer subjects, as identified by Rosenthal and Rosnow (1976), can bias a study's results from recruitment to final conclusion.
Suppose you are creating a research protocol for a study on 'Social Withdrawal in Non-Academic Populations.' To ensure your sample reflects individuals who do not typically participate in research, and considering that volunteer subjects systematically differ from non-volunteers (such as being more sociable, more educated, and having a higher need for approval), which design framework should you construct to reach a more representative sample?
A researcher claims that providing financial compensation to participants eliminates the systematic differences in social class and education between volunteers and non-volunteers. A critical evaluation of this claim reveals that it is _____ because these differences persist regardless of whether compensation is provided.
According to Rosenthal and Rosnow (1976), individuals who volunteer to participate in psychological research tend, on average, to possess a greater need for _____ compared to those who do not volunteer.
A researcher posts flyers recruiting adult volunteers for a study on social anxiety and avoidance, offering a small cash payment for participation. Based on the characteristics of volunteer subjects documented by Rosenthal & Rosnow (1976), it is reasonable to expect that her sample will systematically under-represent individuals who are highly introverted or low in sociability, because volunteers tend to be more sociable than non-volunteers on average.
A researcher reviews a published psychology study that relied entirely on a volunteer sample. Match each volunteer characteristic identified by Rosenthal & Rosnow (1976) to the specific methodological implication it creates when interpreting or generalizing the study's results.
A research methods student must evaluate whether the conclusions of a published study—conducted entirely with volunteer participants—can legitimately be generalized to the broader adult population. Arrange the following evaluative steps in the most defensible logical order, from initial recognition to final judgment and recommendation.
Based on the findings of Rosenthal & Rosnow (1976) regarding the characteristics of volunteer subjects, write a concise analytical response addressing the following: Do research compensation rewards eliminate the systematic differences between volunteers and non-volunteers? Additionally, list the six specific characteristics that distinguish volunteer subjects on average from non-volunteers.
Diagnose the flaw in the researcher's assumption that offering course credit as compensation will prevent volunteer bias. Based on your comprehension of volunteer subject characteristics, explain how the sample may still systematically differ from the student population, and identify which specific characteristics from Rosenthal & Rosnow (1976) are most likely to affect a study focused on social skills.
A clinical psychology researcher uses a voluntary sign-up sheet to recruit participants for a study examining cognitive processing speeds during challenging puzzle tasks. In one to three sentences, apply the volunteer characteristics of 'IQ' and 'need for approval' documented by Rosenthal & Rosnow (1976) to predict how these traits might bias the performance outcomes of this study.