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Standardizing the Procedure
Standardizing the procedure is the process of minimizing unintended variation by conducting an experiment in the exact same way for all participants, regardless of their assigned condition. This consistency prevents extraneous variables, such as experimenter demeanor, from systematically affecting the results and creating confounds. Common standardization techniques include using written protocols, delivering standard or automated instructions, anticipating participant questions in advance, training multiple experimenters together, and ensuring each experimenter tests participants in all conditions.
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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU
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Participant Variable
Situational Variable
Task Variable
Experimental Control
Experimenter's Sex as an Extraneous Variable
Standardizing the Procedure
Experimenter Expectancy Effect
Example of Extraneous Variables: Expressive Writing Experiment
Confounding Variable
Internal Validity
In the context of an experiment, what is an extraneous variable?
Standardizing the Procedure
Experimenter Expectancy Effect
Socially Desirable Responding
Demand Characteristics
Hawthorne Effect
Clear and Brief Procedures
Anonymity in Testing
How does participant reactivity most frequently manifest in psychological research?