Test Bank for Research Methods in Psychology: Evaluating a World of Information, 3rd Edition
Preview Extract
CHAPTER 2: Sources of Information: Why Research Is Best and How to Find it
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Learning Objective 2.1: Describe why experience usually has no comparison group and usually has
confounds.
Learning Objective 2.2: Describe at least five ways intuition is biased.
Learning Objective 2.3: Be cautious about accepting the conclusions of authority figures (especially
conclusions that are not based on research).
Learning Objective 2.4: Explain the advantages of research over intuition and experience.
Learning Objective 2.5: Find research-based information in PsycINFO and other sources.
Learning Objective 2.6: List the forms that research-based information can take: empirical journal
articles, review journal articles, books, and chapters in edited books.
Learning Objective 2.7: Read empirical journal articles with a purpose.
Learning Objective 2.8: Evaluate popular sources of psychological research in trade books, wikis,
and magazines.
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. A psychiatrist is testing a drug that treats depression. He has given the drug to all his patients,
and all of them have experienced a decrease in depressive symptoms. Although this is
interesting, his experience is limited because he does not have:
a.
a reliable way to` measure depressive symptoms.
b.
a comparison group that did not receive the drug.
c.
a hypothesis.
d.
psychotherapy to supplement the drug.
ANS: B
DIF: Medium REF:
Has No Comparison Group OBJ:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Experience
Learning Objective 2.1
MSC: Applying
2. RESEARCH STUDY 2.1: Charlotte is studying subliminal messages and weight loss. She is
curious whether people will lose more weight if they hear subliminal messages that encourage
weight loss (โdonโt eat that food,โ โyou want to be thin,โ etc.) in the music on their iPods
compared to people who do not have subliminal messages in their music. She studies 40 people
and finds the following results:
Exposed to
Number Who Lost
Number Who Did
Weight
Not Lose Weight
(Cell A) 15 people
(Cell C) 5 people
(Cell B) 10 people
(Cell D) 10 people
Subliminal
Messages
Not Exposed to
Subliminal
Messages
To understand whether the subliminal messages have an effect, Charlotte needs to consider
which of the following cells in the chart?
a.
Only Cell A
b.
Only Cell B
c.
Only Cell C
d.
She must consider all of the cells.
ANS: D
DIF: Easy REF:
Has No Comparison Group OBJ:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Experience
Learning Objective 2.1
MSC: Applying
3. RESEARCH STUDY 2.1: Charlotte is studying subliminal messages and weight loss. She is
curious whether people will lose more weight if they hear subliminal messages that encourage
weight loss (โdonโt eat that food,โ โyou want to be thin,โ etc.) in the music on their iPods
compared to people who do not have subliminal messages in their music. She studies 40 people
and finds the following results:
Exposed to
Number Who Lost
Number Who Did
Weight
Not Lose Weight
(Cell A) 15 people
(Cell C) 5 people
(Cell B) 10 people
(Cell D) 10 people
Subliminal
Messages
Not Exposed to
Subliminal
Messages
A change to which of the following cells will result in a different interpretation of the results
of subliminal messages?
a.
A change in any cell will result in a different interpretation.
b.
A change in Cell B only will result in a different interpretation.
c.
A change in Cell C only will result in a different interpretation.
d.
A change in Cell D only will result in a different interpretation.
ANS: A
DIF: Difficult REF:
Has No Comparison Group OBJ:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Experience
Learning Objective 2.1
MSC: Applying
4. Vanessa claims that she sleeps better when she falls asleep to music. She has a comparison group
because she has noticed that she does not listen to music every night, only when she remembers
to charge her iPod. She typically remembers to charge her iPod on nights when she is able to
finish studying earlier. What problem do you see in Vanessaโs reasoning about sleeping better
to music?
a.
Vanessa may be sleeping better because she is less distracted by studying/going to bed
sooner.
b.
Vanessaโs belief that she sleeps better with music is not falsifiable.
c.
Vanessa is biased because she sleeps in the same bed every night.
d.
There is no problem with Vanessaโs reasoning.
ANS: A
DIF: Difficult REF:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Experience
Is Confounded OBJ: Learning Objective 2.1 | Learning Objective 2.4 MSC: Applying
5. Research studies are superior to personal experience because:
a.
they include at least one comparison group.
b.
they avoid constants.
c.
they use confederates.
d.
an authority is involved.
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF:
Better Than Experience OBJ:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Research Is
Learning Objective 2.1
MSC: Analyzing
6. What does it mean that behavioral research is probabilistic?
a.
Conclusions drawn from behavioral research are probably true.
b.
Behavioral research involves probability sampling.
c.
Inferences drawn from behavioral research are not expected to explain all cases.
d.
Behavioral research requires the calculation of probability estimates.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium REF:
Better Than Experience OBJ:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Research Is
Learning Objective 2.4
MSC: Analyzing
7. Angela reads about a study in which cell phone use is associated with migraine headaches. She
says, โWell, that study is not valid because I use a cell phone more than anyone I know and I
never get migraines.โ Based on her comment, Angela may be forgetting which of the following?
a.
Science is based on empiricism.
b.
The study has been replicated.
c.
The study did not properly define cell phone use.
d.
Science is probabilistic.
ANS: D
DIF: Medium REF:
Better Than Experience OBJ:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Research Is
Learning Objective 2.1
MSC: Applying
8. Two biases of intuition discussed in the text are:
a.
being swayed by a good story and being persuaded by what comes easily to mind.
b.
the present/present bias and the confederate bias.
c.
probabilistic thinking and nonintuitive thinking.
d.
overconfidence bias and oversimplification bias.
ANS: A
DIF: Easy REF:
Intuition Is Biased OBJ:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Learning Objective 2.2 MSC:
Remembering
9. James is asked about the best way to study for an exam. He responds that the best way to study
is by making flash cards. He easily thinks of all the times he used flash cards and he made As.
However, he fails to take into consideration all the times he made As and did not use flash cards
and the times he used flash cards and did not do well. His faulty thinking is an example of:
a.
cherry-picking evidence.
b.
availability heuristic.
c.
present/present bias.
d.
asking biased questions.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium REF:
Intuition Is Biased OBJ:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Learning Objective 2.2 MSC:
Applying
10. Edward believes that there are a lot of differences between men and women on a variety of
different dimensions. He believes this because when he thinks about books that have been
written on men and women, he can quickly recall only books that say men and women are
different (e.g., Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus) and cannot recall any that say men
and women are the same. His reliance on what comes to mind is an example of which of the
following?
a.
The availability heuristic
b.
Cherry-picking of evidence
c.
Confirmation bias
d.
Overconfidence
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF:
Intuition Is Biased OBJ:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Learning Objective 2.2 MSC:
Applying
11. Which of the following is a problem presented by the availability heuristic?
a.
We do not examine all of the evidence, only what we can quickly think of.
b.
We rely on the opinions of others rather than on our own opinions.
c.
It keeps us from examining our own experience.
d.
We will never be right in our conclusions.
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF:
Intuition Is Biased OBJ:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Learning Objective 2.2 MSC:
Remembering
12. Asking questions to get the answers we want is known as:
a.
availability heuristic.
b.
cherry-picking of evidence.
c.
confirmation bias.
d.
overconfidence.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy REF:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Intuition Is Biased: Focusing on the Evidence We Like Best
Learning Objective 2.2
OBJ:
MSC: Remembering
13. Sasha believes that she is a nice person. To confirm this, she asks all her friends whether she is
a nice person; they all agree that she is. Sasha concludes that she is a nice person and says she
has evidence of it. However, she does not ask any of her enemies whether they think she is a
nice person. This is an example of which of the following?
a.
Confirmation bias
b.
Availability heuristic
c.
Fourth cell reasoning
d.
Overconfidence
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF: 2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Intuition Is Biased: Focusing on the Evidence We Like Best
Learning Objective 2.2
OBJ:
MSC: Applying
14. Sasha believes that she is a nice person. To confirm this, she asks all her friends whether she is
a nice person; they all agree that she is. Sasha concludes that she is a nice person and says she
has evidence of it. Sasha would likely draw a different conclusion if she did which of the
following?
a.
Asked her enemies if she was a nice person
b.
Counted up all the times she was nice in the past
c.
Asked all her friends the same question again in another six months
d.
Considered all the times she was nice to her enemies
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF: 2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Intuition Is Biased: Focusing on the Evidence We Like Best
Learning Objective 2.2
OBJ:
MSC: Applying
15. In which of the following scenarios should you be skeptical of an authority?
a.
When they present all the evidence on a topic
b.
When they have a scientific degree
c.
When they based their opinions on their intuition
d.
When they have conducted scientific research on the topic
ANS: C
DIF: Medium
OBJ: Learning Objective 2.3
REF:
2.3 Trusting Authorities on the Subject
MSC:
Understanding
16. You and your friends go to see a speaker on campus. The speaker, Dr. Darian, is an โexpertโ on
getting into graduate school. Which of the following should make you less skeptical about his
advice?
a.
His recommendations are based on techniques that have worked for his students.
b.
His recommendations are based on the techniques that helped him get into graduate school.
c.
His recommendations are based on research he conducted for his dissertation.
d.
His recommendations are similar to what you knew before you came to the talk.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult
OBJ: Learning Objective 2.3
REF:
2.3 Trusting Authorities on the Subject
MSC:
Applying
17. If you are interested in reading an overview of peer-reviewed scientific research within a specific
area, which of the following reading sources would you choose?
a.
Edited books
b.
Popular magazines
c.
Scientific journals
d.
An expertโs dissertation
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF:
Scientific Sources OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Consulting
Learning Objective 2.6 MSC:
Understanding
18. Which of the following is true of the distinction between scientific journals and popular
magazines?
a.
Scientific journals are published quarterly; popular magazines are published monthly.
b.
Scientific journals are published on specific topics; popular magazines are not published on
specific topics like psychology.
c.
Scientific journal articles are peer-reviewed; popular magazine articles are not.
d.
Scientific journal article findings explain all cases all of the time; popular magazine articles
only explain certain cases.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium REF:
Scientific Sources OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Consulting
Learning Objective 2.6 | Learning Objective 2.8 MSC: Analyzing
19. Diego is interested in examining the relationship between a personโs attachment style and his or
her relationship satisfaction. He finds 65 studies that have examined this topic. He combines the
results of all these studies and calculates an effect size. His research is most accurately described
as:
a.
a meta-analysis.
b.
a review journal article.
c.
a chapter in an edited book.
d.
a PsycWiki.
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF:
Scientific Sources OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Consulting
Learning Objective 2.6 MSC:
Applying
20. Ellie is looking for a summary of research on the effect size of childhood abuse on adult
depression. Which of the following scientific sources would be an ideal source?
a.
A meta-analysis
b.
A review journal article
c.
A trade book
d.
A chapter in an edited book
ANS: A
DIF: Difficult REF:
Scientific Sources OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Consulting
Learning Objective 2.6 MSC:
Applying
21. Compared with doing a generic Internet search, why is PsycINFO a superior way to find
scientific sources?
a.
It is free.
b.
It searches only sources in psychology and related fields.
c.
It can be done on any computer.
d.
It searches research scientistsโ websites.
ANS: B
DIF: Medium REF:
Scientific Sources OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding
Learning Objective 2.5 MSC:
Remembering
22. Which of the following is the first section of an empirical journal article?
a.
Abstract
b.
Introduction
c.
Results
d.
References
ANS: A
DIF: Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Components of an Empirical Journal Article
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Remembering
23. Matthew is reading an empirical journal article and wants to know whether the authors used the
Big Five Inventory (BFI-44) or the NEO-PI to measure extraversion. In which section would he
find this information?
a.
Introduction
b.
Method
c.
Results
d.
Discussion
ANS: B
DIF: Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Components of an Empirical Journal Article
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Applying
24. Lana is writing her first empirical journal article. Although she thinks she knows why she found
the results she did, she also wants to mention some alternative explanations for her findings. In
which section will she mention these alternative explanations?
a.
Method
b.
Results
c.
Discussion
d.
References
ANS: C
DIF: Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Components of an Empirical Journal Article
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Applying
25. Which of the following is the correct ordering of the sections of an empirical journal article?
a.
Introduction, Results, Discussion, Method, References
b.
Introduction, Discussion, Method, Results, Abstract
c.
Abstract, References, Introduction, Results, Discussion
d.
Abstract, Method, Results, Discussion, References
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult REF: 2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Components of an Empirical Journal Article
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Remembering
26. Javier wants his lab partner to tell him if he thinks the article he found for their project is
appropriate. Rather than have him read the article, which two parts of the paper could Javier
have his lab partner read to get a summary of the article?
a.
The abstract and the first paragraph of the introduction
b.
The abstract and the first paragraph of the discussion
c.
The abstract and the method section
d.
The last paragraph of the introduction and the results section
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult REF: 2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Components of an Empirical Journal Article
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Applying
27. Which of the following is NOT a section or subsection commonly found in an empirical journal
article?
a.
Abstract
b.
Outcomes
c.
Participants
d.
Procedure
ANS: B
DIF: Difficult REF: 2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Components of an Empirical Journal Article
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Remembering
28. When reading an empirical journal article โwith a purpose,โ which two questions should you
ask yourself as you read?
a.
โWhat is the argument?โ and โWhat is the evidence to support the argument?โ
b.
โWhat were the methods?โ and โWhat are the results?โ
c.
โWhat is the hypothesis?โ and โWhat are the explanations?โ
d.
โWhat research exists on this topic?โ and โWhat research needs to be conducted to answer
the question?โ
ANS: A
DIF: Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.7
MSC:
Remembering
29. When reading an empirical journal article โwith a purpose,โ which section should you read
first?
a.
Abstract
b.
Introduction
c.
Method
d.
Discussion
ANS: A
DIF: Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Reading with a Purpose: Empirical Journal Articles
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Remembering
30. When reading an empirical journal article โwith a purpose,โ why should you read the abstract
first?
a.
Because it is the shortest section
b.
Because it provides an overview of the article
c.
Because it is written by the journalโs editor
d.
Because it appears in PsycINFO
ANS: B
DIF: Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Reading with a Purpose: Empirical Journal Articles
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Remembering
31. Looking for which of the following in a trade book will give you a hint as to its scientific rigor?
a.
The cost of the book
b.
The number of pages
c.
The number of references
d.
The number of authors
ANS: C
DIF: Medium REF:
Research in Less Scholarly Places OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding
Learning Objective 2.8
MSC:
Remembering
32. Which of the following is a benefit of using a wiki to review psychological research?
a.
The wikiโs coverage of a topic is usually comprehensive.
b.
The wiki page includes a comprehensive list of references.
c.
The wiki page has been peer-reviewed.
d.
The wiki page can be corrected quickly.
ANS: D
DIF: Medium REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding
Research in Less Scholarly Places: Wikis as a Research Source
OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.8 MSC:Understanding
33. Which of the following is the last section of an empirical journal article?
a.
Method
b.
Results
c.
Discussion
d.
Introduction
ANS: C
DIF: Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research: Components of an Empirical Journal Article
Learning Objective 2.7
OBJ:
MSC: Remembering
34. What is the problem with being swayed by a good story?
a.
A good story is never the true explanation for a scientific finding.
b.
Scientific findings never have commonsense explanations.
c.
A good story may not be supported by data.
d.
Good stories are not falsifiable.
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult REF:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Intuition Is Biased: Being Swayed by a Good Story OBJ:
MSC:
Learning
Objective
2.2
Analyzing
35. After reading the chapter, Cyril says to himself, โI am sure other people might engage in faulty
thinking, but I never would.โ What is Cyril experiencing?
a.
Bias blind spot
b.
Confirmation bias
c.
Faulty intuition
d.
Motivated thinking
ANS: A
DIF: Medium REF:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Intuition Is Biased: Biased About Being Biased
MSC:
OBJ:
Learning
Objective
2.2
Applying
36. Which of the following sources is most likely to contain only information that has been
rigorously peer-reviewed?
a.
Chapters in edited books
b.
Full-length books
c.
Review journal articles
d.
Wikis
ANS: C
DIF: Easy REF:
Scientific Sources OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Consulting
Learning Objective 2.6 MSC:
Remembering
37. Hannah just finished reading an empirical journal article for a class project. What information
might she get out of reading the references section of her article?
a.
A list of the measures used in the study
b.
The name of an article that researched a similar topic
c.
An idea for a future study
d.
An explanation of the statistical tests used
ANS: B
DIF: Medium REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.7
MSC:
Applying
38. Which of the following is a limitation of Google Scholar compared to PsycINFO?
a.
Google Scholar does not provide PDF versions of articles.
b.
Google Scholar is not free to use.
c.
Google Scholar is not limited to just psychology and related fields.
d.
Google Scholar can only be accessed from certain computers.
ANS: C
DIF: Easy REF:
Scientific Sources: Google Scholar OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding
Learning Objective 2.5
MSC:
Understanding
39. Hannah just finished reading an empirical journal article for a class project. Where should she
go if she wants to look for a list of the studyโs hypotheses or research questions?
a.
First page of the article
b.
First page of the method section
c.
Last paragraph of the results section
d.
Last paragraph of the introduction
ANS: D
DIF: Medium REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the
Research OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.7
MSC:
40. How would you adopt the mindset of a scientific reasoner?
a.
Using common sense to understand scientific data
b.
Remaining objective as you interpret scientific data
Applying
c.
Finding evidence that confirms your hypotheses
d.
Reminding yourself that because you know about potential biases, you cannot fall prey to
them
ANS: B
DIF: Easy REF:
Thinker vs. the Scientific Reasoner OBJ:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: The Intuitive
Learning Objective 2.4
MSC:
Remembering
41. Why is it important to adopt the mindset of a scientific reasoner?
a.
To avoid falling into the pitfalls of personal biases
b.
To identify the most intuitive explanations
c.
To be able to sway people with a good story
d.
To know what evidence people like best
ANS: A
DIF: Easy REF:
Thinker vs. the Scientific Reasoner OBJ:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: The Intuitive
Learning Objective 2.4
MSC:
Understanding
42. Which of the following is a limitation of PsycINFO compared to Google Scholar?
a.
PsycINFO does not provide PDF versions of articles.
b.
PsycINFO is not free to use.
c.
PsycINFO is not limited to just psychology and related fields.
d.
PsycINFO does not allow you to search particular fields.
ANS: B
DIF: Easy REF:
Scientific Sources: PsycINFO OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding
Learning Objective 2.5
MSC:
Understanding
43. Different factors that could account for significant results are called .
a.
hypotheses
b.
biases
c.
predictions
d.
confounds
ANS: D
DIF: Easy REF:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Experience
Is Confounded OBJ: Learning Objective 2.1
MSC:
Remembering
44. What is the difference between advice from an authority and that from a researcher?
a.
Authorities weigh all possible opinions, while researchers rely on their own theories.
b.
Authorities interpret the results for you when providing advice, while researchers only
present statistics.
c.
Authorities often base their advice on intuition, while researchers rely on facts.
d.
Authorities always provide advice based on their own research, while researchers base their
advice on results from multiple studies.
ANS: C
DIF: Medium REF:
Learning Objective 2.3
2.3 Trusting Authorities on the Subject OBJ:
MSC:
Understanding
45. Advice that is based on
a.
personal experience
b.
research
c.
intuition
d.
authorityโs conclusions
ANS: B
DIF: Easy REF:
Learning Objective 2.3
is most likely to be correct.
2.3 Trusting Authorities on the Subject OBJ:
MSC:
Understanding
46. You read research that found that first-born children tend to have higher IQs than their siblings.
However, you typically earn higher grades than your older brother. Scientists might explain this
discrepancy by saying that:
a.
research is probabilistic.
b.
you have cherry-picked information to support your conclusion.
c.
you have fallen prey to your blind spot bias.
d.
your intuition is better than research.
ANS: A
DIF: Difficult REF:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Research Is
Probabilistic OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.4
MSC:
Applying
47. Tim tells you that the best way to make friends is by opening the conversation with a joke. He
can easily recall all the friends he met by telling a joke and also the times he opened with chitchat
and didnโt befriend the person. If you were concerned that Tim was making the present/present
bias, what would you ask him?
a.
How many people have you met and befriended?
b.
Do you think the times you made friends by telling jokes might come more easily to mind?
c.
Did you go into conversations where you opened with jokes thinking that you would make
friends?
d.
What about the times you opened with a joke and didnโt become friends with the person?
ANS: D
DIF: Difficult REF:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Intuition Is Biased: Biased About Being Biased
OBJ:
Learning
Objective
2.2
MSC:
Applying
48. Tim tells you that the best way to make friends is by opening the conversation with a joke. He
can easily recall all the friends he met by telling a joke and also the times he opened with chitchat
and didnโt befriend the person. If you were concerned that Tim was making the blind spot bias,
what would you ask him?
a.
What about the times you opened with a joke and didnโt become friends with the person?
b.
Do you think the times you made friends by telling jokes might come more easily to mind?
c.
Have you tested this conclusion systematically?
d.
Did you go into conversations where you opened with jokes thinking that you would make
friends?
ANS: C
DIF: Difficult REF:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That
Intuition Is Biased: Failing to Think About What We Cannot See OBJ:
2.2 MSC:
Learning Objective
Applying
49. Marcella is conducting a PsycINFO search for treatments for autism spectrum disorder by
searching โautism treatment.โ However, her search is returning too many results. If she is
interested in getting more specific results, Marcella could search:
a.
using the โorโ function for all thesaurus synonyms for autism.
b.
โautism treatmentโ and โbehavioralโ and enter an age range of interest.
c.
โautism spectrum disorderโ or โtreatmentโ or โsymptom improvement.โ
d.
โautis*treatment.โ
ANS: B
DIF: Medium REF:
Scientific Sources: PsycINFO OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding
Learning Objective 2.5
MSC: Applying
50. How does research overcome the problem of confounds?
a.
Research uses intuition to detect potential confounds.
b.
Research combines data across diverse individuals.
c.
Research focuses on one possible explanation for the results.
d.
Research systematically compares multiple conditions.
ANS: D
DIF: Medium REF:
Better Than Experience OBJ:
Understanding
SHORT ANSWER
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Research Is
Learning Objective 2.4
MSC:
1. RESEARCH STUDY 2.1: Charlotte is studying subliminal messages and weight loss. She is
curious whether people will lose more weight if they hear subliminal messages that encourage
weight loss (โdonโt eat that food,โ โyou want to be thin,โ etc.) in the music on their iPods than
will people who do not have subliminal messages in their music. She studies 40 people and finds
the following results:
Exposed to
Number Who Lost
Number Who Did
Weight
Not Lose Weight
(Cell A) 15 people
(Cell C) 5 people
(Cell B) 10 people
(Cell D) 10 people
Subliminal
Messages
Not Exposed to
Subliminal
Messages
Although Charlotte is concerned with exposure to subliminal messages, she collects data from
people not exposed to subliminal messages. What is this group called? Why must this group be
included in her study?
ANS:
The group is called a comparison group. This group must be included because Charlotte needs
to consider what happens when people are exposed to the subliminal messages, but to determine
what effect it has, she must also examine what happens among people โnormally,โ that is, when
they are not exposed to the โtreatment.โ
DIF: Medium
REF: 2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Experience Has No
Comparison Group OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.4 MSC: Applying
2. RESEARCH STUDY 2.1: Charlotte is studying subliminal messages and weight loss. She is
curious whether people will lose more weight if they hear subliminal messages that encourage
weight loss (โdonโt eat that food,โ โyou want to be thin,โ etc.) in the music on their iPods than
will people who do not have subliminal messages in their music. She studies 40 people and finds
the following results:
Number Who Lost
Number Who Did
Weight
Not Lose Weight
Exposed to
(Cell A) 15 people
(Cell C) 5 people
(Cell B) 10 people
(Cell D) 10 people
Subliminal
Messages
Not Exposed to
Subliminal
Messages
Explain why the results of Cells B and D are important.
ANS:
The results of Cells B and D are important because they demonstrate the relative rate of
improvement when no treatment is given. One cannot determine whether something is effective
if one does not know what would have happened anyway, in the absence of treatment.
DIF:
Difficult REF:
Comparison Group OBJ:
2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Experience Has No
Learning Objective 2.4 MSC: Analyzing
3. Yasmine believes that attractive people make more money because among her four friends who
work at a local restaurant, the most attractive of the four makes the most in tips. A study by
Judge, Hurst, and Simon (2009) found that attractive people make more money than unattractive
people. Provide two reasons why Yasmine should be more convinced about the relationship
between attractiveness and income by the Judge, Hurst, and Simon paper than by her personal
experience.
ANS: Controlled studies have comparison groups and can avoid confounds.
DIF:
Medium
Experience OBJ:
REF: 2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Research Is Better Than
Learning Objective 2.4 MSC: Applying
4. Imagine that Dr. Jones publishes a study that claims that drinking while pregnant is dangerous
for the health of the unborn baby. He finds that of the 100 women in his study who drank when
pregnant, 78 had children who experienced problems with attention. Of the 100 women in his
study who did not drink when pregnant, only 29 children experienced problems with attention.
Your neighbor says that Dr. Jones is wrong because she drank when pregnant and her child is
perfectly healthy. Explain why Dr. Jones is not wrong.
ANS: Behavioral research is probabilistic, meaning that the conclusions drawn from studies
explain a large percentage of cases, but not necessarily all cases. Students may also explain that
the neighborโs child being healthy (1 data point) does not refute the large number of cases (in
this case, 78) of children who were affected.
DIF:
Medium
Experience OBJ:
REF: 2.1 The Research vs. Your Experience: Research Is Better Than
Learning Objective 2.4
MSC:
Applying
5. Name four examples of biases of intuition.
ANS: Examples of biases of intuition include: being swayed by a good story, the confirmation
bias, the present/present bias, the availability heuristic, and the blind spot bias.
DIF:
Easy REF:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That Intuition Is Biased OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.2
MSC:
Understanding
6. Explain how conclusions drawn from the confirmation bias are different from those using the
theory-data cycle.
ANS: When people engage in the confirmation bias, they are seeking to confirm their
hypotheses and are asking questions that will give them the answer they expect. By contrast,
when people engage in the theory-data cycle, they ask questions that may confirm or disconfirm
their hypothesis. In the latter, they are not trying to find a particular answer but rather trying to
find the correct answer.
DIF:
Difficult REF:
2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: Ways That Intuition Is Biased
OBJ: Learning Objective 2.2
MSC:
Analyzing
7. Name three ways that the scientific reasoner is different from the intuitive thinker.
ANS: Researchers create comparison groups, examine all the data (or all cells), test their ideas
with systematic research, try to ask objective questions, change their theories/beliefs when the
data do not support their original ideas, and try to accept data temporarily (keeping them from
becoming overconfident).
DIF:
Medium
REF: 2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: The Intuitive Thinker vs. the
Scientific Reasoner OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.4 MSC:
Analyzing
8. You are having lunch with your friends, Oliver, Julia, and Richard, and you are discussing the
link between homework and exam grades. Oliver says, โI know that doing homework improves
exam grades because I always do my homework and I have a 4.0.โ Julia says, โI know that doing
homework improves exam grades because a blog I read on an education website says so.โ
Richard says, โI know that doing homework improves exam grades because that makes sense.
Teachers would not assign it if it did not.โ Provide a response to each friend for why his or her
reasoning is unsound.
ANS: Answers may vary, but in each response, students should write that they would mention
to Oliver that his own experience might be biased or flawed because he has no comparison group
(e.g., he might have made good grades without homework, he has just never done that); to Julia
that the writer on that blog, although he or she may appear to be an authority, may not be and
may be basing his or her opinions on personal experience rather than on actual research; and to
Richard that sometimes obvious or intuitive explanations may not be the correct ones.
DIF:
Medium
REF: 2.2 The Research vs. Your Intuition: The Intuitive Thinker vs. the
Scientific Reasoner OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.1 MSC:
Applying
9. Describe three ways that scientific journals/journal articles are different from popular
magazines/magazine articles.
ANS: Answers may vary, but in each response, students must mention at least three of the
following: journal articles are peer-reviewed, journal articles are written for psychology
researchers and students, scientific journals do not tend to have advertisements in them,
scientific journals are available from libraries and online databases (rather than in regular
bookstores).
DIF:
Easy
REF: 2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Consulting Scientific
Sources: Journal Articles: Psychologyโs Most Important Source OBJ:
Learning Objective
2.7 | Learning Objective 2.8 MSC: Understanding
10. Describe two pros and two cons of reading about scientific research in popular magazines
compared with reading about research in scientific journals.
ANS: Two of the pros could include: it is easier to read, it can provide interesting new ideas,
the articles may be easier to access since one does not need a library or subscription of a journal;
and two of the cons could include: the research described may not be accurately reported, the
research may not be important in the field.
DIF:
Medium REF:
Sources OBJ:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Consulting Scientific
Learning Objective 2.7 | Learning Objective 2.8 MSC: Understanding
11. Karla is starting her study for her research methods and needs to begin finding some research
articles. She tells you that she plans on searching for her sources on Google Scholar. Provide
three reasons that you would recommend that she use PsycINFO instead to search for sources.
ANS: Answers may vary, but in each response, students must mention at least three of the
following: PsycINFO allows you to search for terms in specific fields, PsycINFO specifies
whether an article is peer reviewed, and PsycINFO focuses on psychology and psychologyrelated articles.
DIF:
Medium REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding Scientific Sources
OBJ: Learning Objective 2.5
MSC:
Applying
12. Name the six basic sections of an empirical journal article.
ANS: The six basic sections of an empirical journal article are the abstract, the introduction,
the method, the results, the discussion, and the references.
DIF:
Easy
REF: 2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the Research:
Components of an Empirical Journal Article
MSC:
OBJ:
Learning
Objective
2.7
Understanding
13. When reading an empirical journal article โwith a purpose,โ which two questions should you
ask yourself as you read? To this end, which section should you read first in order to quickly
answer these questions?
ANS: The two questions are โWhat is the argument?โ and โWhat is the evidence to support
the argument?โ The abstract should be read first in order to quickly answer these questions.
DIF:
Easy REF:
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Reading the Research OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.7
MSC:
Understanding
14. Provide at least three reasons that explain why a wiki is a less-than-ideal source for
psychological research.
ANS: Answers may vary, but in each response, students should state three of the following: A
wikiโs coverage of a topic is not necessarily comprehensive, the page may not include
references, the page may include incorrect information, and a topic may have pages that are not
specific to psychology.
DIF:
Medium
in
Less
OBJ:
REF:
Scholarly
2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding Research
Places:
Wikis
as
a
Learning Objective 2.8 MSC: Understanding
Research
Source
15. Your friend Samir wants to learn how to be more persuasive. He is a marketing major and thinks
that understanding more about persuasion might be helpful. Which type of scientific sources
might you recommend to him and why?
ANS: Answers may vary, but in each response, students should say that they would point
Samir in the direction of chapters in an edited book or perhaps a trade book. They would
recommend these because they provide more general reviews of research and thus are more
likely to be accessible to a nonpsychology student. They should not point him in the direction
of empirical journal articles (or review journal articles), as such articles are likely to be too
specific to provide Samir with a general overview.
DIF: Medium
REF: 2.4 Finding and Reading the Research: Finding Research in Less
Scholarly Places OBJ:
Learning Objective 2.6 MSC:
Applying
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