One-Group Designs

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Questions

Question 1

In a one-group posttest only design, how is the study conducted?

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Question 2

What is identified as the major limitation of the one-group posttest only design?

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Question 3

How is a one-group pretest-posttest design described in comparison to a within-subjects experiment?

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Question 4

If an anti-drug program airs on television between the pretest and posttest of a study on student attitudes toward drugs, this exemplifies which threat to internal validity?

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Question 5

The threat to internal validity known as 'maturation' occurs when participants change between the pretest and posttest due to what?

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Question 6

What is 'regression to the mean' in the context of a pretest-posttest design?

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Question 7

According to the text, a bowler with a long-term average of 150 who suddenly bowls a 220 will almost certainly do what in the next game, due to regression to the mean?

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Question 8

The tendency for many medical and psychological problems to improve over time without any treatment is known as what?

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Question 9

In their review of depression studies, what did Posternak and Miller find about the improvement of participants in waitlist control conditions?

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Question 10

What is the primary feature of an interrupted time-series design that distinguishes it from a one-group pretest-posttest design?

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Question 11

In Hans Eysenck's classic 1952 article summarizing psychotherapy studies, what proportion of patients were found to have improved between the pretest and posttest?

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Question 12

What was Eysenck's main conclusion after comparing the improvement rate in psychotherapy patients to archival data from state hospitals?

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Question 13

The 1980 book by Mary Lee Smith, Gene Glass, and Thomas Miller, which summarized hundreds of experiments on psychotherapy, found that overall psychotherapy was what?

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Question 14

When a researcher selects participants for a study because of their extremely low scores on a variable, and their scores are higher on a subsequent test, what threat to internal validity is most likely at play?

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Question 15

What is the primary advantage of an interrupted time-series design as illustrated in the hypothetical study on student absences?

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Question 16

The threat of 'instrumentation' to internal validity refers to a situation where...

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Question 17

When does the 'testing' threat to internal validity occur in a pretest-posttest design?

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Question 18

Why must one be cautious about inferring causality from pretest-posttest designs?

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Question 19

What type of quasi-experimental design is described as the weakest?

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Question 20

In the advertiser example where 80 percent of women noticed brighter skin after using a cleanser for a month, why does this statistic mean 'little to nothing'?

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Question 21

A one-group pretest-posttest design is unlike a true within-subjects experiment because...

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Question 22

Which threat to internal validity is concerned with naturally occurring changes in the participants themselves over time, such as growing older or becoming more experienced?

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Question 23

If human observers used to measure behavior become fatigued or change their standards over time during a study, this is an example of which threat to internal validity?

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Question 24

What did Eysenck (1952) use as a comparison for his finding that two-thirds of psychotherapy patients improved?

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Question 25

In the classic interrupted time-series design example from Cook and Campbell (1979), what was the treatment that was found to increase productivity?

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Question 26

What is the common approach mentioned in the text to rule out threats to internal validity such as history and maturation when using a one-group design?

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Question 27

In a one-group pretest-posttest study of a year-long anti-drug program, participants becoming better reasoners over the year could be responsible for a change in attitudes. This is an example of what threat?

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Question 28

What problem does regression to the mean pose when participants are selected for a study because of their extreme scores?

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Question 29

In the hypothetical interrupted time-series graph (Figure 8.1) where the treatment for absences 'did not work', what did the data show?

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Question 30

What was the conclusion of the 1980 meta-analysis by Smith, Glass, and Miller regarding psychotherapy?

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Question 31

A researcher measures attitudes, completes a treatment, and then measures attitudes again. What design is this?

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Question 32

The common cold improving over a week, regardless of whether someone eats chicken soup, is used as an example of what concept?

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Question 33

In a one-group posttest only study, a researcher implements an anti-drug program and then measures students' attitudes. Why is it difficult to determine the program's effectiveness?

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Question 34

When a change in a dependent variable in a pretest-posttest design could be due to participants having further thoughts inspired by the pretest itself, this is which threat to internal validity?

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Question 35

What challenge from Hans Eysenck did the hundreds of experiments conducted by 1980, summarized by Smith, Glass, and Miller, take up?

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Question 36

An interrupted time-series design involves a set of measurements taken at intervals over a period of time that is 'interrupted' by what?

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Question 37

Why would adding a control group to a one-group pretest-posttest design be beneficial?

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Question 38

What did the meta-analysis by Smith, Glass, and Miller (1980) find about the improvement of psychotherapy participants compared to control participants?

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Question 39

A researcher notices that participants became bored with the attitude measure at posttest and were less careful in their responses compared to the pretest. This is an example of which threat to validity?

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Question 40

One-group designs are a type of which broader category of research?

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Question 41

In Eysenck's 1952 article, he concluded that there was no evidence that psychotherapy was effective. What was his recommendation based on this conclusion?

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Question 42

If a researcher wants to measure productivity each week for a year and introduces a new work policy midway through, what is the most appropriate design described in this chapter?

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Question 43

A one-group pretest-posttest design is susceptible to which of the following threats to internal validity?

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Question 44

When comparing the two hypothetical line graphs of student absences in Figure 8.1, the key difference that indicates an effective versus an ineffective treatment is the...

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Question 45

Which of the following describes a 'history' threat to internal validity?

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Question 46

If you are studying the effectiveness of a new teaching method on a class of students by giving a test before and after the method is implemented, and a student in the class wins a national academic award during that time, this event could be considered what kind of threat?

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Question 47

The text states that in a one-group pretest-posttest design, 'if the average posttest score is better than the average pretest score... then it makes sense to conclude that the treatment might be responsible'. Why is this conclusion not certain?

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Question 48

What is the key difference between the one-group posttest only design and the one-group pretest-posttest design?

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Question 49

According to the text, a one-group pretest-posttest design is much like a within-subjects experiment in that each participant is tested first under a control condition and then a treatment condition. What serves as the 'control condition' in this design?

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Question 50

The fact that results from one-group posttest only designs are 'frequently reported in the media and are often misinterpreted by the general population' suggests what about the design?

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