Short Answer

Suppose you are designing a 2×22 \times 2 factorial experiment to investigate driving performance. If you want to demonstrate a main effect of cell phone use, how should you analyze the driving scores of participants with respect to the 'time of day' variable (day vs. night)?

Question: Suppose you are designing a 2×22 \times 2 factorial experiment to investigate driving performance. If you want to demonstrate a main effect of cell phone use, how should you analyze the driving scores of participants with respect to the 'time of day' variable (day vs. night)?

Sample answer: To demonstrate a main effect of cell phone use, you must average the driving performance scores of participants across both the day and night conditions. This allows you to compare the overall performance of participants using cell phones versus those not using them, independent of the time of day.

Key points:

  • Average the driving performance scores across both day and night conditions.
  • Compare the scores of participants with and without cell phones.
  • Isolate the effect of cell phone use independent of the time of day.

Feedback: To find a main effect of cell phone use, you must average the driving performance scores across both levels of the time of day variable (day and night) to show that participants without cell phones perform better overall, regardless of the time of day.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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