Title: Chapter 2: The Research Enterprise in Psychology
1Chapter 2 The Research Enterprise in Psychology
2The Scientific ApproachA Search for Laws
- Basic assumption events are governed by some
lawful order - Goals
- Measurement and description
- Understanding and prediction
- Application and control
3Figure 2.1 Theory construction
4Figure 2.2 Flowchart of steps in a scientific
investigation
5The Scientific Method Terminology
- Operational definitions are used to clarify
precisely what is meant by each variable - Participants or subjects are the organisms whose
behavior is systematically observed in a study - Data collection techniques allow for empirical
observation and measurement - Statistics are used to analyze data and decide
whether hypotheses were supported
6Table 2.1 Key Data Collection Techniques in
Psychology
7The Scientific Method Terminology
- Findings are shared through reports at scientific
meetings and in scientific journals periodicals
that publish technical and scholarly material - Advantages of the scientific method Clarity of
communication and relative intolerance of error - Research methods General strategies for
conducting scientific studies
8Peer Review of Scientific Articles
- The process of publishing scientific studies
allows other experts to evaluate and critique new
research findings. - They carefully evaluate each studys methods,
statistical analyses, and conclusions, as well as
its contribution to knowledge and theory. - The purpose of the peer review process is to
ensure that journals publish reliable findings
based on high-quality research.
9Figure 2.4 The peer review process for journal
submissions.
10Experimental Research Looking for Causes
- Experiment manipulation of one variable under
controlled conditions so that resulting changes
in another variable can be observed - Detection of cause-and-effect relationships
- Independent variable (IV) variable manipulated
- Dependent variable (DV) variable affected by
manipulation - How does X affect Y?
- X Independent Variable, and Y Dependent
Variable
11Experimental and Control GroupsThe Logic of the
Scientific Method
- Experimental group
- Control group
- Random assignment
- Manipulate independent variable for one group
only - Resulting differences in the two groups must be
due to the independent variable - Extraneous and confounding variables
12Figure 2.6 The basic elements of an experiment
13Experimental Designs Variations
- Expose a single group to two different conditions
- Reduces extraneous variables
- When subjects serve as their own control group,
the experiment is said to use a within-subjects
design - When two or more independent groups of subjects
are exposed to a manipulation of an independent
variable, the experiment is said to use a
between-subjects design
14Experimental Designs Variations
- Manipulate more than one independent variable
- Allows for study of interactions between
variables - Use more than one dependent variable
- Obtains a more complete picture of effect of the
independent variable
15Figure 2.7 Manipulation of two independent
variables in an experiment
16Advantages and Disadvantages of Experimental
Research
- Strengths
- conclusions about cause-and-effect can be drawn
- Weaknesses
- artificial nature of experiments
- ethical and practical issues
17Descriptive/Correlational MethodsLooking for
Relationships
- Methods used when a researcher cannot manipulate
the variables under study - Naturalistic observation
- Case studies
- Surveys
- Allow researchers to describe patterns of
behavior and discover links or associations
between variables but cannot imply causation
18Statistics and ResearchDrawing Conclusions
- Statistics using mathematics to organize,
summarize, and interpret numerical data - Descriptive statistics organizing and
summarizing data - Inferential statistics interpreting data and
drawing conclusions
19Descriptive StatisticsMeasures of Central
Tendency
- Measures of central tendency typical or average
score in a distribution - Mean arithmetic average of scores
- Median score falling in the exact center
- Mode most frequently occurring score
- Which most accurately depicts the typical?
20Figure 2.11 Measures of central tendency
21Descriptive Statistics Variability
- Variability how much scores vary from each
other and from the mean - Standard deviation numerical depiction of
variability - High variability in data set high standard
deviation - Low variability in data set low standard
deviation
22Figure 2.12 Variability and the standard
deviation
23Descriptive Statistics Correlation
- When two variables are related to each other,
they are correlated. - Correlation numerical index of degree of
relationship - Correlation expressed as a number between 0 and 1
- Can be positive or negative
- Numbers closer to 1 ( or -) indicate stronger
relationship
24Figure 2.13 Positive and negative correlation
25Figure 2.14 Interpreting correlation coefficients
26CorrelationPrediction, Not Causation
- Higher correlation coefficients increased
ability to predict one variable based on the
other - SAT/ACT scores moderately correlated with first
year college GPA - 2 variables may be highly correlated, but not
causally related - Foot size and vocabulary positively correlated
- Do larger feet cause larger vocabularies?
- The third variable problem
27Figure 2.15 Three possible causal relationships
between correlated variables
28Inferential StatisticsInterpreting Data/Drawing
Conclusions
- Hypothesis testing do observed findings support
the hypotheses? - Are findings real or due to chance?
- Statistical significance when the probability
that the observed findings are due to chance is
very low - Very low less than 5 chances in 100/ .05 level
29Evaluating ResearchMethodological Pitfalls
- Sampling bias
- Placebo effects
- Distortions in self-report data
- Social desirability bias
- Response set
- Experimenter bias
- the double-blind solution
30Figure 2.16 The relationship between the
population and the sample
31Ethics in Psychological ResearchDo the Ends
Justify the Means?
- The question of deception
- The question of animal research
- Controversy among psychologists and the public
- Ethical standards for research the American
Psychological Association - Ensures both human and animal subjects are
treated with dignity
32Figure 2.17 Ethics in research
33The Internet and Psychological Research
- Internet-mediated research refers to studies in
which data collection occurs over the web. - Possible Advantages
- Samples that are much larger and much more
diverse than the samples typically used in
laboratory research - Have the potential to yield more diverse and
representative samples
34The Internet and Psychological Research
- Potential Disadvantages
- Sampling bias resulting from self-selection may
be a more troublesome issue in Internet-mediated
research - Web users tend to be younger, brighter, and more
affluent than nonusers - Data are collected under far less controlled
conditions than in traditional studies