Library/Psychology/Research Methods in Psychology/Generating Good Research Questions

Generating Good Research Questions

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Questions

Question 1

When generating your own research questions about a specific behavior, which of the following is NOT one of the recommended general questions to ask yourself?

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Question 2

What is the primary purpose of looking at the discussion section in a recent research article when trying to generate a research question?

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Question 3

What are the two main criteria that researchers use to evaluate the research questions they generate?

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Question 4

A research question is considered interesting to the scientific community if its answer is in doubt. What does 'in doubt' mean in this context?

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Question 5

Which of the following is NOT a factor that affects the feasibility of a research question?

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Question 6

If a researcher finds that a question about a relationship between two variables has already been studied, what is a recommended strategy?

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Question 7

What does it mean for a research question to 'fill a gap in the research literature'?

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Question 8

Which of the following questions about refining an existing research question is NOT suggested in the text?

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Question 9

What is a key benefit of using research methods that have already been used successfully by other researchers?

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Question 10

How are empirically testable research questions defined in the chapter?

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Question 11

Which of the following is presented as an example of a research question that is NOT interesting because the answer is not in doubt?

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Question 12

If scientific research has already determined how frequent a behavior is, what is the next step suggested for generating a new research question about it?

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Question 13

The example of studying talkativeness in elderly people or people from other cultures, after it was already studied in university students, is used to illustrate what concept?

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Question 14

Why must researchers consider the feasibility of a research question before proceeding?

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Question 15

What is the second benefit mentioned for the good practice of using methods that have already been used successfully by other researchers?

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Question 16

The example of research on note taking by hand improving exam performance is used to illustrate which factor of an interesting research question?

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Question 17

Which of the following describes a key aspect of how an answer to a general question about a behavior can be conceptualized to form a new research question?

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Question 18

What is the third factor listed that affects the interestingness of a research question?

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Question 19

According to the text, does research have to be complicated or difficult to produce interesting and important results?

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Question 20

If a novice researcher is having trouble generating a question, what does the text suggest is a good strategy for refining a question that has already been studied scientifically?

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Question 21

What is the initial strategy suggested for generating an empirical research question if you have a specific psychological characteristic in mind?

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Question 22

The text states that in evaluating a research question's interestingness, it's not about personal interest but about interest to whom?

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Question 23

Which of the following research scenarios best exemplifies a question with 'important practical implications'?

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Question 24

When you generate an answer to the question, 'What are some possible causes of talkativeness?', how should you conceptualize that answer to form a new research question?

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Question 25

What does the text suggest is a final point regarding good practice when choosing a research method?

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Question 26

What is the primary reason that a question that has already been scientifically studied might still be considered interesting?

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Question 27

What approach does the text suggest to assess whether a research question's answer is 'in doubt' before collecting data?

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Question 28

The chapter lists a series of three general questions to ask when you want to refine a research question about an existing relationship. What is the main purpose of this strategy?

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Question 29

Which of the following is NOT listed as a factor that affects the feasibility of a research project?

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Question 30

When is it particularly useful to look to the discussion section of a research article for inspiration?

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Question 31

A student wants to study the relationship between family size and talkativeness. This research question was likely generated by considering what aspect of talkativeness?

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Question 32

According to the text, why is the question 'Are women more talkative than men?' considered interesting?

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Question 33

What is the relationship between the two main criteria for evaluating research questions, 'interestingness' and 'feasibility'?

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Question 34

If a research question about a relationship has been studied, asking whether the relationship is stronger for certain types of people is a strategy for what?

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Question 35

What does the text imply about complex, non-experimental studies involving several variables and complicated statistical analyses?

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Question 36

Which of the following is an example of an uninteresting research question provided in the chapter?

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Question 37

If a researcher decides to refine a question about the relationship between two variables, what is the first refining question suggested by the text?

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Question 38

What is the primary characteristic of a research question that has 'important practical implications'?

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Question 39

The chapter suggests it is good practice to use methods that have already been used successfully. Why is this approach considered 'tried and true'?

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Question 40

What is the second step in the process of generating an empirical research question from a general idea?

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Question 41

The ability to generate 'many different empirically testable questions about almost any behavior' comes from what strategy?

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Question 42

If a researcher studies the difference in talkativeness between same-sex and mixed-sex groups, what kind of question are they investigating?

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Question 43

What is the primary reason researchers should not be discouraged if they find a question has already been studied?

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Question 44

What are the two main sections of Chapter 9: Generating Good Research Questions?

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Question 45

To evaluate the feasibility of a study on manipulating moods, a researcher might use a mood manipulation that has been used successfully before, such as paying participants a compliment. What is the benefit of this approach?

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Question 46

Which of the following factors does the text NOT explicitly mention as affecting a study's feasibility?

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Question 47

What is the relationship between a research question's interestingness to 'us personally' versus its interestingness 'to the scientific community'?

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Question 48

When generating questions, asking 'What types of people might exhibit more or less of the behavior?' helps to conceptualize what?

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Question 49

What does the text suggest a researcher should do if they generate a research question that has never been studied scientifically?

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Question 50

The chapter discusses two criteria for evaluating research questions. Which of these criteria is concerned with factors like time, money, and access to participants?

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