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5 - Planning and Writing the Experimental Research Paper

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Robert J. Sternberg
Affiliation:
Oklahoma State University
Karin Sternberg
Affiliation:
Sternberg Consulting, LLC
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Summary

When research psychologists talk about writing a paper, they are talking about a lengthy and complicated chain of events that includes a great deal more than just reporting research results. In this chapter, we outline these events from start to finish:

PLANNING EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH

Getting an Idea

The basis of any good research is a viable idea that results in a study that contributes to the current state of knowledge. However, getting ideas, and especially getting good ideas, often turns out to be one of the hardest parts of research. If you need help forming ideas for your research, please read Chapter 2.

Selecting Independent Variables

After you have come up with an idea, you need a way to test it. To test the idea, you need one or more independent variables. Independent variables are those variables that are manipulated by the experimenter. In an experiment to test people's susceptibility to persuasive communications, for example, possible independent variables include (a) amount of exposure to persuasive communications, (b) content of persuasive communications, and (c) level of agreement between participants' initial attitudes and the position advocated by the persuasive communications. Once you have chosen your independent variable(s), you must decide how many and what level of them to use.

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Chapter
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The Psychologist's Companion
A Guide to Writing Scientific Papers for Students and Researchers
, pp. 80 - 117
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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