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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Measurement And Methodology
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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. Allows own answer: expression of conflicts - needs - impulses; content interpreted by administrator - some more objective than others; Rorschach Inkblot Test - Thematic Apperception Test - Rosenzweig Picture-Frustration (P-F) Study - Word Association
Lie detector tests
Experimental design
Projective tests (+types)
Rorschach Inkblot Test
2. Subjects alter behaviour because they are being observed
Test-retest reliability
Hawthorne effect
Criterion-referenced tests
Myers-Brigg Type Indicator (MBTI)
3. How much variation there is among n number of scores in a distribution
Inferential statistics
Central Tendency (types and distribution differences)
quasi-experimental design
variance and standard deviation
4. Measure innate ability to learn (debatable) - to predict later performance
Aptitude tests
Population & related
Goodenough Draw-A-Man Test
Content validity
5. 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
Charles Spearmen
normal distribution(+characteristic)
Walter Mischel
Mean IQ
6. How well a test measures a construct; multitrait-multimethod technique determines validity; internal - external: concurrent - construct - content - face
Variability
Validity (+types)
Split-half reliability
Criterion-referenced tests
7. I when incorrectly reject null - thought significant but chance; II when incorrectly accept null - thought chance but significant
Goodenough Draw-A-Man Test
Type I and II errors
Standard normal distributions
Alpha levels
8. For children 4-6
Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory
Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI)
Spearman r correlation coefficient
One-way ANOVA
9. Neither purely descriptive nor purely inferential - can only show relationship - not causality - positive and negative correlation
Alfred Binet
Correlational relationships
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)
Vocational tests
10. Measures the extent to which items in a measure 'hang together' and test the same thing
Lie detector tests
Internal validity
External validity (+types)
mental age
11. Attempt to measure less-defined properties (e.g. intelligence) - check for reliability and validity
random sampling
Lewis Terman
Domain-referenced tests
within subject
12. Tests whether the means on one outcome or dependent variable are significantly different across groups - height or level of anxiety from anxiety scale
Achievement tests
One-way ANOVA
Lie detector tests
Meta-analysis
13. Organize data by showing it in a meaningful way; do not allow conclusions to be drawn beyond the sample; percentiles - frequency distributions - graphs - measures of central tendency - variability
Descriptive statistics (+types)
Mean IQ
Correlational relationships
Inferential statistics
14. Has plotted points connected by lines - used to plot variables that are continuous (categories without clear boundaries)
Domain-referenced tests
Test-retest reliability
median
frequency polygon
15. Combines longitudinal and cross-sectional approach
Goodenough Draw-A-Man Test
Mean IQ
Spearman r correlation coefficient
cohort-sequential design
16. Tests whether at least 2 groups co-vary - can adjust for preexisting differences between groups
Selective attrition
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
Alpha levels
Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA)
17. Transformation of a z-score - mean is 50 and the SD is 10 - T=10(Z)+50
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
T-score
Validity (+types)
Strong-Campbell Interest Inventory
18. Personality measure for 'normal' / less clinical groups than MMPI - by Harrison Gough
California Personality Inventory (CPI)
Variability
Hawthorne effect
External validity (+types)
19. Measure mastery in a particular area (e.g. final exam)
range
Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank
Criterion-referenced tests
cohort-sequential design
20. Give descriptive names - No order or relationship among the variables other than to separate them into groups - ex: male-female
John Horn and Raymond Cattell
nominal variables
Reliability (+types)
Cross validation
21. Used when equivalent one cannot be isolated
stratified sampling
Lewis Terman
Nonequivalent control group
Vocational tests
22. Naturalistic setting - less control over environment than in lab; generates more hypotheses than able to prove
ANOVA/analysis of variance
Field study
Curvilinear relationship
Domain-referenced tests
23. Structured - do not allow own answers; more objective than projective tests; not completely objective because most self-reported; Q-sort - Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) - California Personality Inventory (CPI) - Myers-Brigg Type
Vocational tests
Chi-square test
Objective tests (+types)
Pearson r correlation coefficient
24. Measure arousal of sympathetic nervous system - stimulated by lying and anxiety
Lie detector tests
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
Alfred Binet
Objective tests (+types)
25. For even number of values in the set - take the average of the two middle value
median
T-score
Goodenough Draw-A-Man Test
Internal-External Locus of Control Scale
26. Intelligence in relation to performance; pioneered development of psychometrics - 'no intelligence is culture-free'
Intelligence
Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA)
cohort-sequential design
Anne Anastasi
27. Measure the extent to which test measures what it intends to; concurrent - construct - content - face
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
Mean IQ
Rosenthal effect
External validity (+types)
28. Frequency polygon (continuous variables) - histogram/ bar graph (discrete)
Graphs (types)
Alpha levels
social desirability
predictive value
29. Inactive substance or condition disguised as a treatment substance or condition - used to form control group
Illusory correlation
Nonequivalent control group
ratio variables
placebo
30. Tell you the average extent to which scores were different from the mean - if average standard deviation is large - then scores were highly dispersed
Descriptive statistics (+types)
standard deviation (calculation)
between subject
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
31. Similar to T-test - but can measure more than 2 groups
ANOVA/analysis of variance
Variability
Reactance
Demand characteristic
32. 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
cross-sectional design
Factorial analysis of variance
Lewis Terman
Goodenough Draw-A-Man Test
33. How the score are spread out overall
percentiles
frequency polygon
Variability
Descriptive statistics (+types)
34. When relationship inferred when there is none - ex: many people think there is a relationship between physical and personality characteristics - when evidence show there is none
California Personality Inventory (CPI)
percentiles
Illusory correlation
T-score
35. Measured by the same individual taking the same test more than once
Test-retest reliability
Face validity
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
frequency polygon
36. Birth order vs. intelligence; the older - the more intelligent; the more children - the less intelligent; the greater spacing - the more intelligent
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
Hawthorne effect
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
Robert Zajonc
37. The degree to which an independent variable can predict a dependent variable
predictive value
Myers-Brigg Type Indicator (MBTI)
Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)
Nonequivalent control group
38. Population --> sample/subgroup --> representative and unbiased --> achieved through random sampling --> if it'S not feasible - use convenience sampling instead or stratified sampling
mental age
Percentages under normal distribution based on SDs (from mean to end)
Population & related
Chi-square test
39. When subjects that drop out are different than those that remain; no longer random
Experimenter bias
Selective attrition
Robert Zajonc
Percentages under normal distribution based on SDs (from mean to end)
40. Not intelligence tests; measure sensory and motor development of infants to identify mental retardation; poor predictors of later intelligence
Bayley Scales of Infant Development
Q-sort/measure
mode
Cross validation
41. Neither the subject nor the experimenter know whether the subject is assigned to the treatment or the control group
Internal validity
Spearman r correlation coefficient
Central Tendency (types and distribution differences)
double-blind experiment
42. The process of representing or analyzing numerical data
Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
within subject
statistics
Julian Rotter
43. For children 6-16
Scientific approach
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-R)
Test-retest reliability
Projective tests (+types)
44. Experimenter bias; researchers see what they want to see; minimized in double-blind
ratio variables
Rosenthal effect
Meta-analysis
research design
45. Number of SD a score is from the mean - For normal distribution - (-3 to +3)
ratio variables
Z-scores
Draw-A-Person Test
Field study
46. Might show how often different variables appear; nominal - ordinal - interval - ratio (real zero)
Frequency distributions (+variables)
Anne Anastasi
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
ordinal variables
47. Notable for cross-cultural application and simple directions - to make the best picture of a man - scored based on detail and accuracy - not artistic talent
Experimental design
Central Tendency (types and distribution differences)
Goodenough Draw-A-Man Test
generalizability
48. Cartoons in which one person is frustrating another; asked to describe how the frustrated person responds
frequency polygon
Central Tendency (types and distribution differences)
Rosenzweig Picture-Frustration (P-F) Study
Construct validity
49. Originally used with free association techniques; word called out - subject says next word in mind
Discrete data
Word Association Test
Illusory correlation
Nonequivalent control group
50. Critical of personality trait-theory and personality tests; felt situations (not traits) decide actions
Walter Mischel
Null hypothesis
Percentages under normal distribution based on SDs (from mean to end)
Mean IQ