Stats/Methods I JEOPARDY
Jeopardy Scientific Method Getting Started Ethics MeasurementSampling $100 $200$200 $300 $500 $400 $300 $400 $300 $400 $500 $400
Scientific Method--$100 The method of inquiry which involves relying on an expert’s opinion answer
Scientific Method--$200 The method of inquiry you are using if you refuse to stay in a hotel room on the 13 th floor…Everyone knows 13 is bad luck. answer
Scientific Method--$300 Science prefers this kind of explanation because it relies on the fewest possible assumptions— keep it simple, stupid… answer
Scientific Method--$400 The first formal psychology laboratory was established by this researcher in this country. answer
Scientific Method-$500 Three of the many research or specialty areas in modern day psychology. answer
Getting Started--$100 This kind of observation can often be a great source of research ideas, but a poor source for scientific data. answer
Getting Started--$200 This tri-college-sponsored psychology conference is held every spring and is a great way to network with fellow researchers. answer
Getting Started--$300 This section of a research report includes a statement of the problem under investigation, a review of the literature, and specific hypotheses regarding the outcome of the research. answer
Getting Started--$400 Type of source which summarizes an original research report. A review article is one of these. answer
Getting Started--$500 The name and update rate of the major academic database for psychology. answer
Ethics--$100 Presenting someone’s work or ideas as your own. answer
Ethics--$200 Psychologists’ ethical responsibilities fall into these 2 broad categories. answer
Ethics--$300 Research participants sign this to document their understanding and voluntary participation in the study. answer
Ethics--$400 Issues raised by Milgram’s obedience experiment prompted the psychological community to publish these. answer
Ethics--$500 A deliberate attempt to misrepresent research findings. answer
Measurement-$100 Scale consisting of discrete categories which specify qualitative differences. answer
Measurement--$200 In general, the degree to which the measurement process measures what it claims to measure. answer
Measurement--$300 Using the same instrument to repeatedly measure the same construct should yield this type of reliability. answer
Measurement--$400 It is possible for a test to be ______ without being valid. answer
Measurement--$500 The 3 general modalities of measurement. answer
Sampling--$100 In general, this kind of sample exhibits the same characteristics as the population. answer
Sampling--$200 Type of sampling used when population is unknown and each element can not be listed. answer
Sampling--$300 A subset of the target population, consisting of those individuals who are available to be recruited as participants in the study. answer
Sampling--$400 Another name for the different layers or levels existing within a particular characteristic of a population. answer
Sampling--$500 Name 2 out of the 4 methods of probability sampling. answer
Scientific Method--$100 A: What is the method of authority? Back to board
Scientific Method--$200 A: What is the method of tenacity? Back to board
Scientific Method--$300 A: What is parsimonious? Back to board
Scientific Method--$400 A: What is Wundt and Germany? Back to board
Scientific Method--$500 A: What are (any 3) Behavior analysis, cognitive, social, biological, neuroscience, educational, school, clinical, etc.? Back to board
Getting Started--$100 A: What is unsystematic or casual observation? Back to board
Getting Started--$200 A: What is the Red River Psychology Conference? Back to board
Getting Started--$300 A: What is the Introduction? Back to board
Getting Started--$400 A: What is a secondary source? Back to board
Getting Started--$500 A: What is PsycINFO and monthly? Back to board
Ethics--$100 A: What is plagiarism? Back to board
Ethics--$200 A: What is (1) to research participants and (2) to science? Back to board
Ethics--$300 A: What is a consent form? Back to board
Ethics--$400 A: What are the APA ethical guidelines? Back to board
Ethics--$500 A: What is fraud? Back to board
Measurement--$100 A: What is a nominal scale? Back to board
Measurement--$200 A: What is validity? Back to board
Measurement--$300 A: What is test-retest? Back to board
Measurement--$400 A: What is reliable? Back to board
Measurement--$500 A: What are (1) self-report, (2) physiological, and (3) behavioral measures? Back to board
Sampling--$100 A: What is a representative sample? Back to board
Sampling--$200 A: What is non-probability sampling? Back to board
Sampling--$300 A: What is the accessible population? Back to board
Sampling--$400 A: What are strata? Back to board
Sampling--$500 A: What are: (any two) Simple random sampling Systematic sampling Stratified random sampling Proportionate stratified random sampling? Back to board