Allocation To Conditions - GCSE Psychology Definition

Reviewed by: Claire Neeson

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Allocation to conditions refers to the process in psychological experiments where participants are assigned to different groups or conditions, such as an experimental group and a control group. This method is crucial for ensuring that results are reliable and unbiased. By randomly assigning participants to conditions, researchers aim to ensure that each group is similar in all relevant ways, except for the variable being tested. This helps to establish a cause-and-effect relationship by isolating the variable's impact on the participants' responses or behaviours. Understanding allocation to conditions is important for GCSE Psychology students as it underpins the validity of experimental findings.

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Claire Neeson

Reviewer: Claire Neeson

Expertise: Psychology Content Creator

Claire has been teaching for 34 years, in the UK and overseas. She has taught GCSE, A-level and IB Psychology which has been a lot of fun and extremely exhausting! Claire is now a freelance Psychology teacher and content creator, producing textbooks, revision notes and (hopefully) exciting and interactive teaching materials for use in the classroom and for exam prep. Her passion (apart from Psychology of course) is roller skating and when she is not working (or watching 'Coronation Street') she can be found busting some impressive moves on her local roller rink.

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