THE EXPERIMENTAL METHOD
The experimental method is the gold standard for establishing causality in psychology. This page covers true experiments, types (laboratory, field, natural, quasi), experimental designs, and the research process. Aligned with AQA, Edexcel and OCR specifications.
LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS
Laboratory experiments in psychology involve controlled settings to manipulate independent variables and measure dependent variables. This post covers definition, procedure, advantages (high control, causality, replicability), limitations (artificiality, demand characteristics, low ecological validity), ethical issues, and examples suitable for undergraduate, A-level and IB study. Full AO1, AO2, AO3 coverage.
FIELD EXPERIMENTS
Field experiments in psychology are conducted in natural settings where researchers manipulate the independent variable while measuring the dependent variable. This post examines the definition, procedure, advantages (high ecological validity, authentic behaviour), limitations (lack of control, replication difficulties), ethical issues, and examples suitable for undergraduate, A-level and IB study. Full AO1, AO2, AO3 coverage.
NATURAL EXPERIMENTS
Natural Experiments: Exploring Research Where the IV is Not Manipulated and Their Role in Psychology.
QUASI EXPERIMENTS
Quasi-experiments in psychology lack random allocation of participants to conditions. This post examines independent groups’ quasi-experiments (between-group quasi-experiments) and non-equivalent quasi designs, including examples of each, the statistical treatment, and their disadvantages. Suitable for A-level, IB, and undergraduate study.
NON-EXPERIMENTS
Non-Experiments in Psychology: Research Methods Used When Ethical Concerns or Complex Variables Make Experiments Impossible.
OBSERVATIONS
Observational Techniques in Psychology: Exploring Types (Naturalistic, Controlled, Covert, Overt, Participant, Non-Participant) and Design Methods (Behavioural Categories, Event Sampling, Time Sampling).
QUESTIONNAIRES & INTERVIEWS
Questionnaires and Interviews in Psychology: Self-Report Techniques, Structured and Unstructured Formats, and Effective Design with Open and Closed Questions.
CORRELATIONS
Correlations in Psychology: Exploring Co-Variables, Positive, Negative, and Zero Correlations, Correlation Coefficients, and Their Distinction from Experiments.
CASE STUDIES
Case Studies in Psychology: In-Depth Exploration of Individuals or Groups in Non-Experimental Research.
