Other methods (like observation or surveys) can show relationships, but they cannot prove causation because of one major issue:
👉 Confounding variables
⚠️ Confounding Variables (The Hidden Problem)
A confounding variable is something extra that influences the results without the researcher intending it to.
Simple Definition (Easy Read)
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A confounding variable = a hidden influence
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It changes the result without you realizing
Dog Example
You want to test:
“Does a stranger cause more barking than a friend?”
But what if:
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The stranger is louder than the friend
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The owner looks nervous
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The test happens in a new place
👉 Now you don’t know what caused the barking.
Was it:
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The stranger?
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The noise?
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The owner’s anxiety?
That’s the problem.
🎯 Controlling Extraneous Variables
Extraneous variables = all variables that are not the IV but could affect the DV
The goal in experiments is:
👉 Turn extraneous variables into constants
🧠 Key Control Methods (Clear + Practical)
1. Standardisation
Make everything the same every time.
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Same room
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Same distance
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Same time of day
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Same instructions
✔ This reduces differences between trials
2. Randomisation
Randomly assign participants (or animals) to groups.
✔ Prevents bias
✔ Spreads confounding variables evenly
3. Control Groups
Compare against a baseline condition
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No “treatment”
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Normal situation
✔ Helps isolate the effect of the IV
4. Counterbalancing (Advanced but useful)
Change the order of conditions
Example:
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Some dogs see the stranger first
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Others see the friend first
✔ Prevents order effects (learning, fatigue)
5. Blinding
Hide information from participants or observers
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Single-blind: participant doesn’t know
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Double-blind: neither participant nor researcher knows
✔ Reduces bias and expectation effects
🧪 Why Observational Methods Are Not Enough
Observation = watching behavior without control
Problem:
You cannot control variables
Example:
You observe:
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Dogs bark more at strangers
But you don’t know:
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If the stranger looked threatening
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If the owner reacted
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If the dog had past trauma
👉 So you can say:
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“There is a relationship” ❌
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But NOT “This causes that” ❌
🐶 Real Research Link
The kind of structured testing you’re describing is similar to:
Originally used with human infants, later adapted to dogs to study:
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Attachment
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Security
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Response to strangers
✔ Shows how controlled environments reveal emotional behavior
🧠 Ethical Concerns in Animal Experiments
This is especially important for your work (mental health, disability, advocacy).
⚖️ The “Four Rs” (Animal Ethics)
1. Reduction
Use the fewest animals possible
2. Refinement
Reduce stress and improve conditions
Example:
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No real aggression
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Use actors or mild stimuli
3. Replacement
Use alternatives if possible
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Simulations
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Observational studies
4. Responsibility
Ensure:
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Proper care
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No long-term harm
🚫 What Researchers Must Avoid
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Causing trauma
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Long-term anxiety
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Physical harm
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Breaking trust (especially in bonded animals like dogs)
❤️ Important Real-World Insight
Your earlier point about grief and pets is actually supported by research:
👉 The human–animal bond can be as strong as human relationships
This is why:
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Loss of a dog can feel like losing a family member
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Experiments involving pets must be especially careful
🧩 Bringing It All Together
To prove causation in psychology, you must:
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Change one variable only (IV)
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Measure its effect (DV)
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Control everything else
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Remove confounding variables
👉 That’s what makes the experimental method powerful—and difficult.
🧠 1. The Core Idea (Refined)
The experimental method tries to prove:
👉 “Does one thing cause another?”
But your example shows something deeper:
👉 Behaviour is often two-way (reciprocal)
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The dog reacts to the stranger
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The stranger reacts to the dog
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The dog then reacts again
This creates a feedback loop, not a simple cause → effect.
🔁 2. Reciprocal Behaviour (Your Key Insight)
What you described fits with:
👉 Reciprocal determinism (from Social Learning Theory)
Simple Explanation
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Behaviour affects environment
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Environment affects behaviour
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Both keep influencing each other
🐶 In Your Scenario
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The stranger feels fear
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That fear changes body language (tense posture, hesitation)
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The dog senses this (dogs are highly sensitive to tone, movement, scent)
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The dog becomes alert or defensive
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The stranger becomes more afraid
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The dog escalates further
👉 This is a cycle, not a single cause
⚠️ 3. Why This Creates Confounding Variables
This is where experiments become difficult.
You originally had:
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IV = stranger vs friend
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DV = barking
But now we must consider hidden variables:
New Confounding Variables
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Stranger’s fear level
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Body language (tense vs relaxed)
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Tone of voice
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Past experiences (dog and human)
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Owner’s reaction
👉 These are not controlled automatically
🎯 4. Controlling This in an Experiment
To keep the experiment valid, researchers must separate variables carefully
✔ Improved Experimental Design
Independent Variables (split properly)
Instead of one IV, we refine it:
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Familiarity
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Emotional Behaviour of Stranger
Dependent Variable
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Bark frequency
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Body posture (tail, ears, stance)
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Distance maintained
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Stress signals
Key Control Strategy
👉 The same actor performs each condition
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Same clothing
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Same distance
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Same movements (scripted)
✔ This removes variation in behaviour
Additional Control
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Train the actor to display:
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“Fear” in a consistent way
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“Calm” in a consistent way
👉 This prevents random emotional differences
🧪 5. The Reality Problem
Even with control, one issue remains:
👉 You cannot fully control real fear
As you said:
“It is easier said than done not to show fear.”
That is completely accurate.
🧠 Why This Matters
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Real fear is physiological (heart rate, smell, micro-movements)
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Dogs may detect:
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Adrenaline
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Subtle tension
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Eye contact
👉 So even trained actors may not fully replicate real fear
🔍 6. What This Means for Research
Because of this, psychologists often:
Combine Methods
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Experiment (for control)
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Observation (for realism)
✔ Example Approach
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Lab experiment (controlled acting)
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Natural observation (real-life dog encounters)
👉 Compare both sets of results
🐾 7. Ethical Considerations (Updated with Your Scenario)
Your version adds more ethical complexity
🚫 Risks
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Dog becomes stressed or defensive
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Stranger experiences genuine fear
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Escalation could occur
✔ Ethical Adjustments
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No real aggression (only mild cues)
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Immediate stop if stress signs appear
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Use trained dogs with calm temperaments
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Professional supervision
❤️ 8. Real-World Insight (Very Important)
Your statement reflects real life:
Fear is not easily controlled—whether facing humans or animals.
This links to:
👉 Which means behaviour is not just situational—it’s personal and emotional
🧩 Final Understanding (Clear Summary)
Your improved model is:
👉 Behaviour is influenced by:
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The situation (stranger vs friend)
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The emotional state of both individuals
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The interaction between them
✔ Key Takeaway
The experimental method tries to simplify reality:
But your example shows:
👉 Real behaviour is dynamic, emotional, and reciprocal