SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Measurement And Methodology
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
gre
,
psychology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Attitude change in response to feeling that options are limited; e.g. dislike experiment and intentionally behaving unnaturally - or being set on a certain flavour of ice cream as soon as told it is sold out
Linear regression
social desirability
Reactance
range
2. Measure of fascism or authoritarian personality
Charles Spearmen
F-scale or F-ratio
Descriptive statistics (+types)
Myers-Brigg Type Indicator (MBTI)
3. Not intelligence tests; measure sensory and motor development of infants to identify mental retardation; poor predictors of later intelligence
Bayley Scales of Infant Development
Descriptive statistics (+types)
Central Tendency (types and distribution differences)
Aptitude tests
4. Measured by the same individual taking the same test more than once
Test-retest reliability
Fluid intelligence
Experimental design
Frequency distributions (+variables)
5. Attempt to measure less-defined properties (e.g. intelligence) - check for reliability and validity
Domain-referenced tests
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)
double-blind experiment
Variability
6. Neither purely descriptive nor purely inferential - can only show relationship - not causality - positive and negative correlation
Criterion-referenced tests
Correlational relationships
placebo effect
Face validity
7. Internal-External Locus of Control Scale
Julian Rotter
percentiles
Selective attrition
Experimenter bias
8. Tests whether at least 2 groups co-vary - can adjust for preexisting differences between groups
Field study
Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA)
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
independent variable
9. Whether test really taps abstract concept being measured
Myers-Brigg Type Indicator (MBTI)
research design
Rorschach Inkblot Test
Construct validity
10. Used when equivalent one cannot be isolated
Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI)
cross-sectional design
Correlational relationships
Nonequivalent control group
11. How a researcher attempts to examine a hypothesis - different questions call for different approaches - some approaches are more scientific than others
research design
Descriptive statistics (+types)
Intelligence
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
12. When subjects act in ways they think experimenter wants or expects
Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank
Demand characteristic
F-scale or F-ratio
research design
13. Used most commonly on standardized test
Intelligence
ordinal variables
Crystallized intelligence
percentiles
14. Measure arousal of sympathetic nervous system - stimulated by lying and anxiety
Experimenter bias
Lie detector tests
statistics
cohort-sequential design
15. Bell curve; larger the sample - greater chance of having a normal distribution
normal distribution(+characteristic)
Frequency distributions (+variables)
Learn the shape of different distributions
Lie detector tests
16. When people agree with opposing statements; giving tacit agreement
Acquiescence
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-R)
Field study
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
17. Data that has been counted rather than measured - usually limited to whole or positive values - ex: group size - number of hospital visit - number of symptoms
Lewis Terman
Discrete data
confounding variable
random sampling
18. Revised Binet scale to Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale; also studied gifted children - those with higher IQs better adjusted
Statistical regression
Test-retest reliability
Lewis Terman
Q-sort/measure
19. How the score are spread out overall
T-test
Learn the shape of different distributions
Variability
between subject
20. Describe what is seen in each of 10 inkblots; scoring is complex; validity questionable
placebo
Illusory correlation
normal distribution(+characteristic)
Rorschach Inkblot Test
21. Tests the effects of two independent variables or treatment conditions at once
Two-way ANOVA
Robert Zajonc
Frequency distributions (+variables)
Field study
22. Normal curve - negatively skewed distribution - positively sknewed distribution - bimodal distribution - platykuric distribution
Fluid intelligence
Correlational relationships
Learn the shape of different distributions
quasi-experimental design
23. Every member of the population has an equal chance of being chosen for the sample
independent variable
Z-scores
random sampling
stratified sampling
24. Created to determine whether a person feels responsible for things that happen (internal) or no control over events in life (external)
cohort-sequential design
Standard normal distributions
Internal-External Locus of Control Scale
variance (calculation)
25. Tests whether the means on one outcome or dependent variable are significantly different across groups - height or level of anxiety from anxiety scale
Cross validation
Continuous data
Projective tests (+types)
One-way ANOVA
26. Mean is 0 - and SD=1 - This with Z-score allow you to compare one person'S score on two different distributions
Continuous data
Curvilinear relationship
Bayley Scales of Infant Development
Standard normal distributions
27. Calculates how off the mean might be in either direction
Statistical regression
nominal variables
standard error of mean
Item analysis (reliability)
28. Originally used with free association techniques; word called out - subject says next word in mind
predictive value
placebo effect
Alpha levels
Word Association Test
29. Similar to word association - finish incomplete sentences
Alpha levels
Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank
Hawthorne effect
confounding variable
30. Aims to match demographic characteristics to population (i.e. 50% female - etc)
stratified sampling
Split-half reliability
Concurrent validity
ordinal variables
31. Order - variables need to be arranged by order (not necessarily equally spaced) - ex: maranthon finishers
Discrete data
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
stratified sampling
ordinal variables
32. The degree to which the result from an experiment can be applied to the population and the real world
generalizability
normal distribution(+characteristic)
between subject
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
33. The process of representing or analyzing numerical data
Demand characteristic
statistically significant
statistics
between subject
34. Combines longitudinal and cross-sectional approach
cohort-sequential design
Factorial analysis of variance
Learn the shape of different distributions
placebo
35. Population --> sample/subgroup --> representative and unbiased --> achieved through random sampling --> if it'S not feasible - use convenience sampling instead or stratified sampling
Robert Zajonc
Population & related
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
Donald Campbell and Donald Fiske
36. The age level of a person'S functioning according to the IQ test
histogram
mental age
range
Aptitude tests
37. Frequency polygon (continuous variables) - histogram/ bar graph (discrete)
Inferential statistics
Graphs (types)
Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory
double-blind experiment
38. When subject behave differently just because they thing that they have received the treatment substance or condition
generalizability
Cross validation
placebo effect
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
39. Mean of Americans is standardized to 100 - with SD 15 or 16 depending on test; correlates most with IQ of biological parents and socioeconomic status
Rorschach Inkblot Test
double-blind experiment
Content validity
Mean IQ
40. A level of <0.05or <0.01 means that chance that seemingly significant errors are due to random variation rather than to true systematic variance is less than 5% or 1%
Alpha levels
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
Factorial analysis of variance
ordinal variables
41. Created multitrait-multimethod technique to determine validity of tests
Aptitude tests
nominal variables
Criterion-referenced tests
Donald Campbell and Donald Fiske
42. Has plotted points connected by lines - used to plot variables that are continuous (categories without clear boundaries)
Charles Spearmen
Illusory correlation
frequency polygon
Test-retest reliability
43. For ranks; determining the line that describes a linear relationship
Intelligence
Inferential statistics
Spearman r correlation coefficient
Nonequivalent control group
44. Comparing an individual'S performance on 2 halves of the same test to reveal internal consistency; internal consistency can be increased by item analysis
Meta-analysis
statistically significant
Correlational relationships
Split-half reliability
45. Compares 2 groups of people like an experiment - but this is used when it is not feasible or ethical to use random assignment ex: smoker vs. cancer
Frequency distributions (+variables)
percentiles
quasi-experimental design
Walter Mischel
46. Fluid intelligence declines with old age while crystallized intelligence does not
Chi-square test
cross-sectional design
Achievement tests
John Horn and Raymond Cattell
47. Tests the same person at multiple time points and looks at changes within that person
histogram
within subject
Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory
Criterion-referenced tests
48. Includes: testable hypothesis - reproducible experiment - operationalized definition (observable and measurable)
Item analysis (reliability)
Scientific approach
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-R)
Null hypothesis
49. Used when an experiment involves more than one independent variable - can separate the effects of different levels of different variables - can isolate main effects - can identify interaction effects - ex: studying effect of brain lesion on problem s
Factorial analysis of variance
One-way ANOVA
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
range
50. Naturalistic setting - less control over environment than in lab; generates more hypotheses than able to prove
stratified sampling
Field study
Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA)
Demand characteristic