chapter 1: psychology, research, and you pages 2 – 21
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 1: Psychology,
Research, and You Pages 2 – 21
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Food for Thought When the city’s ice cream
sales are highest, the number of drownings is also highest; therefore, increasing ice cream sales causes an increase in drownings.
A series of Dutch statistics shows that an increase in the number of storks nesting in the area during the spring was related to an increase in the number of human babies born at that time. More storks must mean more babies, right?
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Definitions of Psychology The science of behavior and mental
processes “Inner” experiences like dreams Scientific testing and causal relationships
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Becoming a Psychological Detective
What is the claim and who is making it? Personal Bias Evaluate authority Cultural Bias
Whose face is on a penny? Who stole the greatest number of bases in a
single season of professional baseball?
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Becoming a Psychological Detective
Is the claim based on scientific observations? Does the claimant use personal experiences or
documented research?
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Becoming a Psychological Detective
What do statistics reveal? Are the test results statistically significant?
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Becoming a Psychological Detective
Are there plausible alternative explanations? Spurious relationships
‘A’ may be related to or correlate with ‘B’, but ‘A’ does not cause ‘B’
There is another explanation
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The Incredible Edible Egg Bias? Personal gain? Observations?
My dad says…
Statistics? Most vitamins are very low in amount, less than 1%
Other explanations? Good nutrition and exercise
http://youtube.com/watch?v=UmPwL1YulMA
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“Trimspa, Baby”
What are they selling? Bias? Statistics?
Results not typical
Other explanations? Plastic surgery http://youtube.com/watch?v=u9oMEfFlmYQ
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Review When evaluating a claim, ask:
What is the claim and who is making it? Is the claim based on scientific observations? What do statistics reveal? Are there plausible alternative explanations for
the claim?
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Research Methods in Psychology Scientific Method
Make careful and precise observations of a phenomena or event
Develop an explanation, a theory Develop a hypothesis
Prediction about future behaviors Test and retest the hypothesis
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Types of Research Methods The Case Study Naturalistic Observation Correlational Research Survey Research These methods cannot give us a cause-
and-effect statement
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Types of Research MethodsThe Case Study
Also called a clinical study In Depth One Person or Few People Uses data from one person to understand
the behavior in others
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Types of Research Methods:The Case Study Advantages
Researchers can gather a lot of detailed information
Provides suggestions for further research
Disadvantages Not always
generalizable What we learn
about one person may not necessarily apply to others
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Types of Research MethodsNaturalistic Observation
Describes the settings, frequency, and characteristics of certain behaviors in the real world
Observe in natural settings Experimenter does not interfere at all
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Types of Research MethodsNaturalistic Observation Advantage
Real life situation data instead of generalized or simulated
Disadvantage Reactive Observations
Ones that interfere with the behavior being studied
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Types of Research MethodsCorrelational Research
Test of whether two items are related or tend to occur together
Example: SAT/ACT Exam scores and First-year GPA
Shown as a correlation coefficient (r) Direction refers to Positive or Negative
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Correlations
0
10
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1 2 3 4 5
0102030405060708090100
1 2 3 4 5
Positive Correlation + 1.00
x ↑ , y ↑ OR x ↓ , y ↓
Negative Correlation - 1.00
x ↓ , y ↑ OR x ↑ , y ↓
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Correlations: 1. Studying time and
grades
2. Time spent reading and weight lost
3. Cost of a diamond and number of carats
4. Time spent eating and weight lost
a. +0.90
b. -0.08
c. +0.70
d. -0.90
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Types of Research MethodsSurvey Research
Gathers data from a sample that represents a larger population
Efficient way to collect lots of information Face-to-Face interviews Telephone Written Computer
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Types of Research MethodsSurvey Research
Must find a representative sample Reflects the larger population Questions must elicit meaningful and useful
responses Must check questions for cultural and personal
bias
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Types of Research MethodsThe Experimental Method
Can provide cause-and-effect statements Involves manipulating variables to
determine how they affect other variables Considered most powerful research method
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Types of Research MethodsThe Experimental Method
Independent variable (usually x) Variable manipulated to see effects on the
dependent variable
Dependent variable (usually y) Variable that shows the test results by reacting to
the independent variable
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The Experimental Method Operational definitions
Precise definition that helps others replicate the experiment
Experimental group Participants exposed to the independent variable
Control group Participants not exposed to the independent
variable
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The Experimental Method To insure reliability:
Repeat the research Control extraneous variables
Ones other than the independent variable that can influence the outcome of the experiment
Select very similar control and experimental groups
Random assignment – based on chance
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Statistics and Psychology Statistics
Used to summarize, analyze, and interpret data
Descriptive and Inferential Statistics
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Descriptive vs. Inferential Summarizes a set of
numbers Measure of central
tendency Mean Mode Median
Measures of variability Range Standard Deviation
Determines if ind. variable had a significant effect
Mathematical odds of of the observed behavior Does it happen by
chance?
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Research Ethics Protection from harm Confidentiality Voluntary Participation Deception and Intimidation
Debriefing Researchers must explain any deception at the
conclusion of the experiment
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The End