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Causal relationship  A relationship in which changes to the value of one variable cause changes in the value of another.
Correlational relationship  A relationship in which the value of one variable changes systematically with the value of a second variable.
Correlational research  Research in which no independent variables are manipulated. Instead, two or more dependent variables are measured to identify possible correlational relationships.
Third-variable problem  A problem that interferes with drawing causal inferences from correlational results. A third, unmeasured variable affects both measured variables, causing the latter to appear correlated even though neither variable influences the other.
Directionality problem  A problem that interferes with drawing causal inferences from correlational results that involves not being able to clearly specify the direction of causality between variables.
Experimental research  Research in which independent variables are manipulated and behavior is measured while extraneous variables are controlled.
Independent variable  The variable that is manipulated in an experiment. Its value is determined by the experimenter, not the subject.
Treatment  A level of an independent variable applied during an experiment. In multifactor designs, a specific combination of the levels of each factor.
Dependent variable  The variable measured in a study. Its value is determined by the behavior of the subject and may depend on the value of the independent variable.
Experimental group  A group of subjects in an experiment that receives the nonzero level of the independent variable.
Control group  A group of subjects in an experiment that does not receive the experimental treatment. The data from the control group are used as a baseline against which data from the experimental group are compared.
Extraneous variable  Any variable that is not systematically manipulated in an experiment but that still may affect the behavior being observed.
Demonstration  A nonexperimental technique in which some phenomenon is demonstrated. No control group is used.
Internal validity  The extent to which a study evaluates the intended hypotheses.
Confounding  Two variables that vary together in such a way that the effects of one cannot be separated from the effects of the other.
External validity  The extent to which the results of a study extend beyond the limited sample used in the study.
Simulation  A laboratory research technique in which you attempt to re-create as closely as possible a real-world phenomenon.







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