Download Chapter 1 Thinking Critically with Psychological Science

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Behaviorism wikipedia , lookup

Educational psychology wikipedia , lookup

Psychological behaviorism wikipedia , lookup

Theoretical psychology wikipedia , lookup

Developmental psychology wikipedia , lookup

Attribution (psychology) wikipedia , lookup

Terror management theory wikipedia , lookup

Occupational health psychology wikipedia , lookup

Stanford prison experiment wikipedia , lookup

Confirmation bias wikipedia , lookup

Milgram experiment wikipedia , lookup

Observational methods in psychology wikipedia , lookup

Cyberpsychology wikipedia , lookup

Cognitive psychology wikipedia , lookup

Cultural psychology wikipedia , lookup

Music psychology wikipedia , lookup

Psychometrics wikipedia , lookup

International psychology wikipedia , lookup

Psychological evaluation wikipedia , lookup

Conservation psychology wikipedia , lookup

Subfields of psychology wikipedia , lookup

Abnormal psychology wikipedia , lookup

History of psychology wikipedia , lookup

Cross-cultural psychology wikipedia , lookup

Social psychology wikipedia , lookup

Psychological injury wikipedia , lookup

Experimental psychology wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY
(7th Ed)
Chapter 1
Thinking Critically with
Psychological Science
James A. McCubbin, PhD
Clemson University
Worth Publishers
The Need for
Psychological Science
Psychologists, like all scientists, use
the scientific method to construct
theories that organize observations
and imply testable hypotheses
The Need for
Psychological Science
 Hindsight Bias
 we tend to believe, after learning an
outcome, that we would have foreseen it
 the “I-knew-it-all-along” phenomenon
 Overconfidence
 we tend to think we know more than we
do
The Need for
Psychological Science
 Critical Thinking
 thinking that does
not blindly accept
arguments and
conclusions
 examines assumptions
 discerns hidden values
 evaluates evidence
The Amazing Randi--Skeptic
The Need for
Psychological Science
 Theory
 an explanation using an integrated set of
principles that organizes and predicts
observations
 Hypothesis
 a testable prediction
 often implied by a theory
The Need for
Psychological Science
The Need for
Psychological Science
 Operational Definition
 a statement of procedures (operations)
used to define research variables
 Example intelligence may be operationally defined as
what an intelligence test measures
The Need for
Psychological Science
 Replication
 repeating the essence of a research
study to see whether the basic
finding generalizes to other
participants and circumstances
 usually with different participants in
different situations
Description
Psychologists describe behavior
using case studies, surveys, and
naturalistic observation
Description
Case Study
 Psychologists
study one or
more individuals
in great depth in
the hope of
revealing things
true of us all
Is language uniquely human?
Description
 Survey
 technique for ascertaining the self-reported
attitudes or behaviors of people
 usually by questioning a representative, random
sample of people
 Random Sample
 a sample that fairly represents a population
because each member has an equal chance of
inclusion
Description
 False Consensus Effect
 tendency to overestimate the extent to
which others share our beliefs and
behaviors
 Population
 all the cases in a group, from which
samples may be drawn for a study
Description
Description
 If marbles of two
colors are mixed well
in the large jar, the
fastest way to know
their ratio is to blindly
transfer a few into a
smaller one and
count them
Description
 Naturalistic
Observation
 observing and
recording behavior
in naturally
occurring situations
without trying to
manipulate and
control the situation
Correlation
 Correlation Coefficient
 a statistical measure of the extent to which two factors vary
together, and thus how well either factor predicts the other
Indicates direction
of relationship
(positive or negative)
Correlation
coefficient
r = +.37
Indicates strength
of relationship
(0.00 to 1.00)
Correlation
 Scatterplot
 a graphed cluster of dots, each of which
represents the values of two variables
 the slope of the points suggests the direction of
the relationship
 the amount of scatter suggests the strength of
the correlation
 little scatter indicates high correlation
 also called a scattergram or scatter diagram
Correlation
Perfect positive
correlation (+1.00)
No relationship (0.00)
Perfect negative
correlation (-1.00)
Scatterplots, showing patterns of correlations
Correlation
Height and Temperament of 20 Men
Height in
Subject Inches Temperament
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
80
63
61
79
74
69
62
75
77
60
75
66
60
90
60
42
42
60
81
39
Height in
Subject Inches Temperament
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
64
76
71
66
73
70
63
71
68
70
48
69
72
57
63
75
30
57
84
39
Correlation
95
Temperament 90
scores 85
80
75
70
65
60
55
50
45
40
35
30
25
55
60
65
70
Height in inches
75
80
Scatterplot of Height and Temperament
85
Correlation
Three Possible Cause-Effect Relationships
(1)
Low self-esteem
could cause
Depression
or
(2)
Depression
could cause
Low self-esteem
or
Low self-esteem
(3)
Distressing events
or biological
predisposition
could cause
and
Depression
Illusory Correlation
 Illusory
Correlation
 the perception
of a
relationship
where none
exists
Conceive
Adopt
Do not
adopt
Do not conceive
confirming
evidence
disconfirming
evidence
disconfirming
evidence
confirming
evidence
Two Random
Sequences
 Your chances of
being dealt
either of these
hands is
precisely the
same: 1 in
2,598,960.
Experimentation
 Experiment
 an investigator manipulates one or more
factors (independent variables) to observe
their effect on some behavior or mental
process (the dependent variable)
 by random assignment of participants the
experiment controls other relevant factors
Experimentation
 Placebo
 an inert substance or condition that may be
administered instead of a presumed active agent,
such as a drug, to see if it triggers the effects
believed to characterize the active agent
 Double-blind Procedure
 both the research participants and the research
staff are ignorant (blind) about whether the
research participants have received the treatment
or a placebo
 commonly used in drug-evaluation studies
Experimentation
 Experimental Condition
 the condition of an experiment that exposes
participants to the treatment, that is, to one
version of the independent variable
 Control Condition
 the condition of an experiment that contrasts
with the experimental treatment
 serves as a comparison for evaluating the effect
of the treatment
Experimentation
 Random Assignment
 assigning participants to
experimental and control conditions
by chance
 minimizes pre-existing differences
between those assigned to the
different groups
Experimentation
 Independent Variable
 the experimental factor that is manipulated
 the variable whose effect is being studied
 Dependent Variable
 the experimental factor that may change in
response to manipulations of the independent
variable
 in psychology it is usually a behavior or mental
process
Experimentation
Research Strategies
Subliminal tape content
Self-esteem
Tape label
Self-esteem
Memory
Memory
 Design of the
subliminal
tapes
experiment
Statistical Reasoning
Percentage
still functioning
after 10 years
100%
99
98
97
96
95
Our Brand Brand Brand
Brand
X
Y
Z
Brand of truck
Statistical Reasoning
Percentage
still functioning
after 10 years
100%
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Our Brand
Brand
X
Brand Brand
Y
Z
Brand of truck
Statistical Reasoning
 Mode
 the most frequently occurring score in a
distribution
 Mean
 the arithmetic average of a distribution
 obtained by adding the scores and then dividing
by the number of scores
 Median
 the middle score in a distribution
 half the scores are above it and half are below it
Statistical Reasoning
A Skewed Distribution
15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
90
475
70
Mode Median
One Family
Mean
Income per family in thousands of dollars
710
Statistical Reasoning
 Range
 the difference between the highest and lowest
scores in a distribution
 Standard Deviation
 a computed measure of how much scores vary
around the mean
 Statistical Significance
 a statistical statement of how likely it is that an
obtained result occurred by chance
Frequently Asked Questions
about Psychology
Can laboratory experiments
illuminate everyday life?
Frequently Asked Questions
about Psychology
Does behavior depend on
ones culture?
 Culture--the enduring behaviors,
ideas, attitudes, and traditions
shared by a large group of people
and transmitted from one
generation to the next
Frequently Asked Questions
about Psychology
Does behavior vary with
gender?
Frequently Asked Questions
about Psychology
Why do psychologists study
animals?
Is it ethical to experiment on
animals?
Is it ethical to experiment on
people?
Frequently Asked Questions
about Psychology
Is
psychology
free of
value
judgments?
Frequently Asked Questions
about Psychology
Is psychology potentially
dangerous?