r
Symbol
used for the Pearson-product moment correlation (correlation
coefficient)
Random
Assignment
Assigning
subjects to experimental groups based on chance.
Random
Sample
A group of
subjects representing the population who are
selected through chance.
Range
the difference between the highest and lowest score in a distribution (often 1 is added to the result when computing
statistics to allow for the 0.5 on either end lost
due to rounding).
Rank-Ordered
Array
A
table consisting of data in order of highest to lowest or lowest to highest where each data is given a numbered rank depicting it's difference from the highest or lowest score
Ratio
Scale
Any scale of measurement possessing magnitude, equal intervals, and an absolute zero
Rational Emotive Therapy
A Cognitive Therapy based on Albert
Ellis' theory that cognitions control our emotions
and behaviors; therefore, changing the way we
think about things will affect the way we feel and
the way we behave.
Rationalization
A defense
mechanism where one believes or states an
acceptable explanation for a behavior as opposed
to the real explanation.
Raw
Data
The initial data gathered that has not yet been graphed, organized, or analyzed.
Reaction
Formation
A defense
mechanism where unacceptable impulses are
converted to their opposite.
Reality
Principle
According
the Freud, the attempt by the ego to satisfy both the
id and the superego while still considering the
reality of the situation.
Recency
Effect
The tendency to
remember the last bit of information due to the
shorter time available for forgetting.
Reconstruction
Tendency to fill in the gaps in our memory and
often believe these represent true memories.
Referent
Power
Power given to an individual due to respect
and/or desire to be similar to that individual.
Reflection
A
therapeutic technique in humanistic therapy where the
feelings and thoughts of the client are reflected or
reworded back to the client to assist in understanding
them.
Regression
Analysis
Used with a correlation to determine a regression equation that predicts or estimates a persons score on one variable if the other is known.
Rehearsal
Repeating
information in order to improve our recall of this
information.
Reinforcer
Anything
that follows a behavior that increases the chances
of that behavior occurring again.
Regression
A defense
mechanism where one reverts to an earlier stage of
development.
Reliability
A statistical measure of a tests
consistency, or ability to result in similar
scores if given repeatedly.
Reliability
Coefficient
The correlation coefficient is called the reliability coefficient when a correlation is used to determine or estimate reliability.
Replication
The
strength of a research study is only as good as its ability to be replicated. In other words, if a study has significant
results but can not be done again, it is difficult to assess whether it was a good study or a result of error.
Representative
Sample
A sample or subgroup of the population that
possesses the same characteristics of the population
Representativeness
Heuristic
A rule of
thumb where similarity to a prototype or similar
situation dictates a decision.
Repression
In Psychoanalytic
Theory, the defense mechanism whereby our thoughts
are pulled out of our consciousness and into our
unconscious.
Resistance
In
psychoanalysis, the client's refusal to
participate in a therapeutic intervention due to
underlying issues unrelated to the intervention.
Response
Prevention
A
therapeutic technique where stimuli is presented
to the client but the client is not permitted to
exercise his or her typical response. Used
for the treatment of phobias, obsessive compulsive
disorder and other anxiety disorders.
Reticular
Formation (Reticular Activating System)
Part
of the brain stem involved in arousal and
attention, sleep and wakefulness, and control of
reflexes.
Retinal
Disparity
The
binocular cue to distance referring to the
distance between the two images sent to the brain
by our eyes. The farther apart these images,
the closer the object.
Retrieval
The process
of bringing material out of long term memory and
into consciousness.
Retroactive
Interference
Interference
in memory created by later learning.
Reversal
Design
Any single subject
design that includes the removal of treatment to
determine if the subject reverts to baseline (ex. ABA,
ABAB)
Reversibility
A
child's ability to reverse operations and therefore
recognize that the qualities of an object remain the
same despite changes in appearance. Occurs in
Piaget's Concrete Operational Stage of Cognitive
Development (e.g., 1+2=3 to 3-2=1).
Reward
Power
Power derived through an ability to offer rewards.
Rogers,
Carl
A
humanistic Psychologist who developed
Client-Centered Therapy.
Rorschach
Inkblot Test
A
projective technique utilizing ambiguous inkblots
as stimuli.
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