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SKIDMORE PS 306 - PS 306 Exam No. 1

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Page 1 of 7 ID# Exam1 PS 306, Spring 2010 The Skidmore Honor Code is in effect for this exam, as always. You’ll be asked to write out the Honor Code statement at the end of the exam. Read each question carefully and answer it completely. Pay careful attention to the point value of each question, thinking of a point as a minute. That is, if you answer a 10-point question in about 10 minutes, you’ll complete the exam in a timely fashion. I’m also presuming that after taking PS 217, you all remember that the standard deviation (s) is simply the square root of the variance (s2). Good luck! 1. Suppose that you were interested in estimating the variance of a population. What statistic would you compute? What would you do if you had four independent samples from a population? What term in an independent groups ANOVA source table represents an analogous situation? [5 pts] 2. An independent groups design and a repeated measures design are both important tools in the psychologist’s experimental arsenal. Distinguish between the two designs in terms of setting up experiments, power, situations in which one design or the other might be inappropriate, etc. [10 pts]Page 2 of 7 3. Recently Simone Schnall and her colleagues published a paper in Psychological Science: Schnall, S., Roper, J., & Fessler, D. M. T. (2010). Elevation leads to altruistic behavior. From their abstract: Feelings of elevation, elicited by witnessing another person perform a good deed, have been hypothesized to motivate a desire to help others. However, despite growing interest in the determinants of prosocial behavior, there is only limited evidence that elevation leads to increases in altruistic behavior…Feelings of elevation, but not feelings of amusement or happiness, predicted the amount of helping. Together, these results provide evidence that witnessing another person’s altruistic behavior elicits elevation, a discrete emotion that, in turn, leads to tangible increases in altruism. From their Procedure section: Participants were informed that they were taking part in a 1-hr experiment on episodic memory in which they would watch a film clip, write about it, and complete a 30-min computer task. Tested individually, participants were randomly assigned to watch the elevation film clip from the Oprah Winfrey Show (elevation condition), the control film clip (the first 7 min of “The Open Ocean,” David Attenborough’s (1984) nature documentary describing a journey through the deepest part of the ocean), or a clip from a British comedy (“Fawlty Towers”) intended to induce mirth (mirth condition). The experimenter then feigned three unsuccessful attempts to open the computer file that ostensibly needed to be completed by the participant. She then told the participant that, because it was impossible to complete the next part of the study, the participant was free to leave, but would still receive the full hour’s worth of course credit. Following the procedure outlined in Bartlett and DeSteno (2006), when the participant got up to leave, the experimenter asked, apparently as an afterthought, whether she would be willing to complete another questionnaire, ostensibly from another study for which the experimenter needed to establish norms. The experimenter noted that the questionnaire was, unfortunately, rather boring, emphasizing that the participant was under no obligation, and was free to stop whenever she wanted, but that completing any number of the items would greatly assist the experimenter. If the participant agreed to help, she was seated at a desk, reminded that she was free to stop whenever she wished, and given 85 elementary math problems. The participant’s work on the problems was secretly timed (the dependent variable in the experiment, time spent on the task). The participant was then probed for suspicions regarding the purpose of the study and debriefed. The results from the study were analyzed as illustrated in the incomplete source table below. First, complete the source table below. ANOVA Time Sum of Squares df Mean Square F Sig. Between Groups 2677.1 .003 Within Groups 5587.6 Total 8264.73Page 3 of 7 Next, analyze and interpret the results as completely as you can. [15 pts] 4. Distinguish between internal and external validity. Using evidence from your readings this semester (especially Mook), which type of validity would you argue is more important (i.e., less serious to violate). [10 pts]Page 4 of 7 5. Another recent article in Psychological Science comes from Saul Miller and Jon Maner: Miller, S. L., & Maner, J. K. (2010) Scent of a woman: Men’s testosterone responses to olfactory ovulation cues. Adapted from their abstract: Adaptationist models of human mating provide a useful framework for identifying subtle, biologically based mechanisms influencing cross-gender social interaction. In line with this framework, the current studies examined the extent to which olfactory cues to female ovulation—scents of women at the peak of their reproductive fertility—influence endocrinological responses in men. Men in the current study smelled T-shirts worn by women near ovulation or far from ovulation. Men exposed to the scent of an ovulating woman subsequently displayed higher levels of testosterone than did men exposed to the scent of a nonovulating woman. Hence, olfactory cues signaling women’s levels of reproductive fertility were associated with specific endocrinological responses in men—responses that have been linked to sexual behavior and the initiation of romantic courtship. I’ve interpolated their data from the graph to produce the output above. The graph is from their paper (note the curve). Interpret their results as completely as you can. Given the output, how would you predict the man’s testosterone level, when presented with a T-shirt from a woman who was ovulating (0 days from ovulation)? Judging from the abstract, would you describe this study as correlational? In other words, would you be comfortable making causal claims? [10 pts]Page 5 of 7 6. In the video at the beginning of the semester, two studies were described (the social psychological study on fear and affiliation and the perceptual development study on the effects of light deprivation). One of the studies would have benefited from a manipulation check and the other would not. Which one would, and why? Which one would not,


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