Learn Before
Short Answer

Suppose a researcher expects a spreading interaction in a 2×22 \times 2 factorial experiment where independent variable A (levels A1 and A2) is on the horizontal axis and variable B (levels B1 and B2) is represented by bar colors. If there is a large difference in scores between B1 and B2 at level A1, describe what the comparison bars (B1 vs. B2) must look like at level A2 to support their hypothesis.

Question: Suppose a researcher expects a spreading interaction in a 2×22 \times 2 factorial experiment where independent variable A (levels A1 and A2) is on the horizontal axis and variable B (levels B1 and B2) is represented by bar colors. If there is a large difference in scores between B1 and B2 at level A1, describe what the comparison bars (B1 vs. B2) must look like at level A2 to support their hypothesis.

Sample answer: To show a spreading interaction, the comparison bars representing levels B1 and B2 must have little to no difference in height at level A2 of independent variable A. This is because a spreading interaction requires a prominent difference at only one level of the variable on the horizontal axis and little to no difference at the second level.

Key points:

  • Apply the concept of a spreading interaction to a new scenario.
  • Specify that the bars representing B1 and B2 must have little to no difference in height at level A2.
  • Explain that this pattern shows the effect of variable B is prominent at level A1 but absent or minimal at level A2.

Rubric: The answer must apply the definition of a spreading interaction to state that the bars for B1 and B2 at level A2 must be nearly identical or show little to no difference in height, contrasting with the large difference at level A1.

0

1

Updated 2026-05-26

Contributors are:

Who are from:

Tags

KPU

Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

Related