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Preview of Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Hearing: How Much Louder to Notice a Difference?

Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Hearing: How Much Louder to Notice a Difference?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students apply Weber's Law (ΔI = k × I, where k = 0.1 for hearing) to calculate the just noticeable difference (JND) in loudness for ten stimulus intensities ranging from 20 to 110 dB. After completing the data table, students plot intensity on the x-axis and JND on the y-axis, identify the linear relationship, and explain in everyday language how the JND grows proportionally with intensity. A real-world application problem asks students to calculate the minimum loudness increase a concert-goer
Preview of Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Smell: How Much Stronger Before You Notice?

Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Smell: How Much Stronger Before You Notice?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students apply Weber's Law (ΔI = k × I, where k = 0.05 for smell) to calculate JNDs for ten odor concentrations ranging from 20 to 500 AU (arbitrary units). After completing the data table and plotting the graph, students describe the linear intensity-JND relationship and explain how the olfactory system's sensitivity relates proportionally to baseline concentration. A real-world problem asks students to calculate the minimum odor increase a fragrance evaluator named Parfumia would detect at 120
Preview of Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Taste: How Much Saltier Before You Notice?

Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Taste: How Much Saltier Before You Notice?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students apply Weber's Law (ΔI = k × I, where k = 0.20 for saltiness) to calculate JNDs for ten salt concentrations ranging from 1 to 40 g/L. The relatively high k value for taste (compared to vision and kinesthesis) gives students data that demonstrates taste's lower sensitivity to proportional changes. After graphing, students describe the linear relationship and explain what the larger k value implies about gustatory discrimination. A real-world problem asks students to calculate the minimum
Preview of Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Temperature: How Hot Before You Feel the Diff.

Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Temperature: How Hot Before You Feel the Diff.

Created by
Brian Garber
Students apply Weber's Law (ΔI = k × I, where k = 0.07 for temperature) to calculate JNDs for ten temperatures ranging from 10 to 55°C. The lab introduces students to thermal sensation as a measurable, Weber's Law-governed sensory modality. After graphing and identifying the linear relationship, students explain how the JND for temperature grows with baseline temperature. A real-world problem asks students to calculate the minimum temperature increase a hot tub enthusiast named Chilldaddy would
Preview of Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Touch: How Much Pressure Before You Feel More?

Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Touch: How Much Pressure Before You Feel More?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students apply Weber's Law (ΔI = k × I, where k = 0.14 for touch/pressure) to calculate JNDs for ten pressure intensities ranging from 50 to 1500 g. The wide range of values — from light touch to heavy pressure — gives students data that clearly illustrates the proportional scaling of JND across a broad sensory range. After graphing, students describe the linear relationship. A real-world problem asks students to calculate the minimum pressure increase a massage therapist named Squishy would nee
Preview of Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Vision: How Much Brighter Before Your Eye Notices

Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Vision: How Much Brighter Before Your Eye Notices

Created by
Brian Garber
Students apply Weber's Law (ΔI = k × I, where k = 0.02 for brightness) to calculate JNDs for ten light intensities ranging from 100 to 3000 candelas (cd). The very low k value for vision — the lowest in the collection alongside kinesthesis — demonstrates that the visual system is among the most sensitive to proportional changes, requiring only a 2% change for detection. After graphing, students note the linear relationship and discuss the implications of the small k value. A real-world problem a
Preview of Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Kinesthesis: How Much Heavier Before You Feel It?

Psychology Lab Weber's Law and Kinesthesis: How Much Heavier Before You Feel It?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students apply Weber's Law (ΔI = k × I, where k = 0.02 for kinesthesis) to calculate JNDs for ten lifted weights ranging from 100 to 5000 g. Sharing the same k value as vision (0.02), this lab allows for cross-modal comparison of sensitivity and demonstrates that the kinesthetic system — despite sensing a very different type of stimulus — matches visual sensitivity in proportional discrimination. After graphing, students describe the linear relationship. A real-world problem asks students to cal
Preview of Psychology Lab Investigative Career Interests: Do Juniors or Seniors Score Highe

Psychology Lab Investigative Career Interests: Do Juniors or Seniors Score Highe

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the IIP RIASEC Markers Holland Code assessment at openpsychometrics.org and record only their Investigative (I) score, which reflects interest in science, research, and analytical thinking. Students pool Investigative scores with classmates, separating results by grade level. Junior and senior scores are entered into an independent samples t-test to evaluate whether career interest differences are statistically significant. Students analyze group averages, interpret statistical
Preview of Psychology Lab Juniors vs. Seniors: Who Is More Hypersensitive?

Psychology Lab Juniors vs. Seniors: Who Is More Hypersensitive?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Hypersensitive Narcissism Scale (HSNS) measuring covert narcissism — characterized by hypersensitivity to criticism, self-absorption, and fragile self-esteem — then collect scores from junior and senior classmates to run an independent samples t-test. The lab is one of the more conceptually sophisticated in the collection, asking students to consider whether hypersensitive narcissism might change across high school years. Juniors navigating high-stakes performance pressure
Preview of Psychology Lab Autism Spectrum Traits in Juniors vs. Seniors: A t-Test Lab

Psychology Lab Autism Spectrum Traits in Juniors vs. Seniors: A t-Test Lab

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ), a widely used self-report measure of autism-spectrum-associated traits such as social skill differences, attention switching, and attention to detail. Students record their scores and contribute to a class dataset organized by grade level. Junior and senior scores are entered into an independent samples t-test to determine whether differences in autism spectrum trait expression are statistically significant across grade levels. Students interp
Preview of Psychology Lab Tired and Grumpy: Does Sleep Quality Predict Negative Affect?

Psychology Lab Tired and Grumpy: Does Sleep Quality Predict Negative Affect?

Created by
Brian Garber
Tired and Grumpy: Does Sleep Quality Predict Negative Affect? Students complete the Groningen Sleep Quality Scale (GSQS) and the PANAS Negative Affect subscale, then pool data to calculate a Pearson r. The lab connects sleep neuroscience — specifically amygdala reactivity to sleep deprivation — to emotional experience, providing a biological mechanism for the predicted correlation. Students analyze the bidirectional cycle in which poor sleep increases negative emotion and negative emotion disr
Preview of Target Toss Regression Lab: Linear/Exponential/Power Models (AP Stats/Precalc)

Target Toss Regression Lab: Linear/Exponential/Power Models (AP Stats/Precalc)

Aim - Toss - Model: Target Toss Lab for Linear, Exponential & Power (AP Precalculus, Algebra 2, AP Statistics)Bring regression to life in AP Statistics and Precalculus with this target toss lab! Students collect real data, then compare linear, exponential, and power models using log transformations, residuals, and r². It's a hands-on, data-rich investigation. In this safe “candy toss” lab, students collect data at increasing distances, compute success rates as proportions, and use log transfo
Preview of Psychology Lab Juniors vs. Seniors: Do Femininity Traits Change? A BSRI Lab

Psychology Lab Juniors vs. Seniors: Do Femininity Traits Change? A BSRI Lab

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Bem Sex Role Inventory (BSRI) and record only their Femininity subscale score, then collect scores from junior and senior classmates to run an independent samples t-test. The Femininity subscale measures self-reported traits historically associated with femininity — warmth, nurturance, sensitivity, and compassion — regardless of the students gender. The lab examines whether these interpersonally oriented traits change meaningfully between junior and senior year, and invites
Preview of Psychology Lab Want Friends, Fear People: Unmet Belonging Needs and Social Anx.

Psychology Lab Want Friends, Fear People: Unmet Belonging Needs and Social Anx.

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Belonging/Love subscale of a Maslow-based needs assessment and the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS), then pool paired scores from 9 classmates to calculate a Pearson r. The lab examines a clinically important paradox: people who most want social connection may simultaneously be most afraid of it. Students explain the psychological mechanism — unmet belonging needs can intensify the stakes of social evaluation, increasing fear of rejection and feeding social anxiety — a
Preview of Psychology Lab Is It Anxiety or Just About Health? Comparing Two Constructs

Psychology Lab Is It Anxiety or Just About Health? Comparing Two Constructs

Created by
Brian Garber
Is It Anxiety or Just About Health? Comparing Two Anxiety Constructs Students complete the Short Health Anxiety Inventory (HAI-18) and the GAD-7 General Anxiety scale, then pool data to calculate a Pearson r. The lab examines whether health anxiety is a specific form of general anxiety or a distinct clinical construct, and explores how heightened attention to bodily sensations differs from generalized worry. Discussion connects the lab to post-pandemic increases in health anxiety and challenge
Preview of Psychology Lab Juniors vs. Seniors: Who Feels More Connected to Nature?

Psychology Lab Juniors vs. Seniors: Who Feels More Connected to Nature?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Connectedness to Nature Scale (CNS), which measures the degree to which a person feels part of the natural world, then collect scores from junior and senior classmates to run an independent samples t-test. The lab explores whether environmental identity and nature connectedness — shown in research to buffer stress and support well-being — differs between the two grade levels. Students consider whether time spent outdoors, exposure to nature during adolescence, or the increa
Preview of Psychology Lab Wired Differently or Just Introverted? ASD Traits and Introversio

Psychology Lab Wired Differently or Just Introverted? ASD Traits and Introversio

Created by
Brian Garber
Activity Description Students complete the Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ) and an Introversion scale (MIES), then pool paired scores from 9 classmates to calculate a Pearson r. The lab examines whether people higher in autism-spectrum-like tendencies also tend to score higher in introversion. Students explain the overlapping mechanisms — social processing differences in ASD traits and energy-drain from social interaction in introversion both produce preference for limited social engagement — whi
Preview of Psychology Lab The Sensitive Narcissist: Covert Narcissism and Paranoid Thinking

Psychology Lab The Sensitive Narcissist: Covert Narcissism and Paranoid Thinking

Created by
Brian Garber
Activity Description Students complete the Hypersensitive Narcissism Scale (HSNS) measuring covert narcissism and the Ideas of Social Reference subscale of the Green et al. Paranoid Thoughts Scale (GPTS), then pool paired scores from 9 classmates to calculate a Pearson r. The lab examines whether people who are hypersensitive about their self-image tend to be more suspicious of others' motives. Students explain the mechanism — covert narcissists' fragile self-esteem makes them hypervigilant fo
Preview of Psychology Lab Stage Fright and Gender: Do Men or Women Have More Social Anxiety

Psychology Lab Stage Fright and Gender: Do Men or Women Have More Social Anxiety

Created by
Brian Garber
Stage Fright and Gender: Do Men or Women Have More Social Anxiety? Students complete the Social Phobia Inventory (SPIN) and pool scores from male and female classmates to run an independent samples t-test. The lab notes that the SPIN assesses the past week, and that social anxiety is common without necessarily indicating disorder. Students explore social pressures and gender-specific expectations that might produce differences in social anxiety levels and are reminded that research on gender a
Preview of Psychology Lab Grit: Does Passion and Perseverance Predict Life Satisfaction?

Psychology Lab Grit: Does Passion and Perseverance Predict Life Satisfaction?

Created by
Brian Garber
Grit: Does Passion and Perseverance Predict Life Satisfaction? Students complete Duckworth's Short Grit Scale (GRIT-S) and the Satisfaction With Life Scale (SWLS), then pool data to calculate a Pearson r. The lab explores whether passion and perseverance for long-term goals predicts life satisfaction, and examines the two grit subscales (consistency of interest vs. perseverance of effort) to ask which matters more. Students are challenged to consider whether high life satisfaction might itself
Preview of Lab Caffeine and Decision-Making: A Correlational Study

Lab Caffeine and Decision-Making: A Correlational Study

Created by
Brian Garber
Caffeinated Decisions: Investigating the Neural Economics of Risk and Reward This laboratory exercise explores the relationship between caffeine consumption and ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VPC) function through a correlational study. Students begin by calculating their daily caffeine intake using an online calculator, then assess their VPC function by completing the Iowa Gambling Task, a decision-making assessment that relies on the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. After obtaining their own
Preview of Psychology Lab Stuck in Your Head: Neuroticism, Rumination, Negative Thinking

Psychology Lab Stuck in Your Head: Neuroticism, Rumination, Negative Thinking

Created by
Brian Garber
Stuck in Your Head: Neuroticism, Rumination, and Negative Thinking Students complete the Eysenck Personality Test's Neuroticism subscale and the Rumination Response Scale (RRS), then pool data to compute a Pearson r. The lab examines the neurobiological basis of neuroticism (limbic system overreactivity) and its connection to repetitive negative thinking. Students explore the causal direction problem — whether neuroticism causes rumination or rumination deepens neuroticism over time — and con
Preview of Psychology Lab Who Feels More? Testing Empathy Differences Collection

Psychology Lab Who Feels More? Testing Empathy Differences Collection

Created by
Brian Garber
Who Feels More? Testing Empathy Differences Students complete the Empathy Quotient (EQ) scale and pool scores from male and female classmates, dog people and cat people, pets and no pets, and juniors and seniors to perform an independent samples t-test. Students determine if the differences between groups are statistically significant. I have a ton more Psychology stuff in my store, check it out! You have managed to find the source of the best Psychology and AP Psychology activities
Preview of Psychology Lab Health Anxiety: Does Rumination or Suspicion Drive It More?

Psychology Lab Health Anxiety: Does Rumination or Suspicion Drive It More?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Short Health Anxiety Inventory HAI-18 (X), the Rumination Response Scale RRS (Y), and the GPTS Social Reference subscale (Z), then collect all three scores from 9 classmates and run two correlations: Health Anxiety vs. Rumination and Health Anxiety vs. Paranoid Social Thinking. The lab examines whether health preoccupation is more strongly driven by repetitive introspective worry (rumination) or by externally-directed suspicion (paranoid thinking). Students evaluate a ficti
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