Title: Mind, Behavior and Science
1Chapter 2
Research Methods
2How Do Psychologists Develop New Knowledge?
- Empirical investigation The collecting of
objective information firsthand by making careful
measurements based on direct experience/observatio
n - Observation must be objective!!!
- Theory Testable explanation for a set of facts
or observations. In science, a theory is NOT
just speculation or guess.
3Objective or Inference?
- He had his notebook open in from of him, but he
took no notes and he looked at his watch 23 times
during the lecture. - When the therapy session was over, she was so
anxious to get away that she left her purse and
umbrella. - People must have assumed that the man lying
beside the street was drunk and they made no
effort to help him.
4The Five Steps of the Scientific Method
Developing a hypothesis
- Hypothesis A statement predicting the outcome
of a scientific study
Performing a controlled test
Gathering objective data
- Operational definitionsExact procedures used in
establishing experimental conditions and
measurement of results
Analyzing the results
Publishing, criticizing, and replicating the
results
5The Five Steps of the Scientific Method
Developing a hypothesis
- Independent variable The variable manipulated
by the experimenter
Performing a controlled test
Gathering objective data
- Random presentation Using chance alone to
determine the order in which the stimulus is
presented
Analyzing the results
Publishing, criticizing, and replicating the
results
6The Five Steps of the Scientific Method
Developing a hypothesis
- Dependent variable The measured outcome of a
study the responses of participants in a study
Performing a controlled test
Gathering objective data
Analyzing the results
Publishing, criticizing, and replicating the
results
7Dependent v. Independent Variables
- The effect of breakfast on academic performance.
- The effect of studying on AP Exam scores.
- The effect of hitting someone over the head with
a baseball bat on dizziness. - The effect of Mint Oreos on body weight.
- The effect of sleep on mood.
- The effect of doggies running into sliding glass
doors on their intelligence. ?
8Experimental Method
- Experiment Researcher controls all conditions
and directly manipulates conditions - Confounding variables Have an unwanted
influence on the outcome of an experiment - Controls Constraints to ensure that each
subject has the exact same conditions - Control Group v. Experimental Group
- Random assignment Equal chance of being chosen
for the experimental group
9The Five Steps of the Scientific Method
Developing a hypothesis
Performing a controlled test
Gathering objective data
- Based on statistical analyses of results, the
hypothesis is accepted or rejected
Analyzing the results
Publishing, criticizing, and replicating the
results
10The Five Steps of the Scientific Method
Developing a hypothesis
Performing a controlled test
- Researchers must find out whether their work can
withstand the scrutiny of the scientific community
Gathering objective data
Analyzing the results
- Replication Doing a study over to see whether
the same results are obtained
Publishing, criticizing, and replicating the
results
11Bias
- Includes
- Personal bias
- Expectancy bias
- Bias could affect the way an experimenter designs
a study, collects data, or interprets results - Double-blind studies attempt to control bias
- Must control confounding variables
12Ethics in Research
- American Psychological Association (APA)
- Institutional Review Board (IRB)
- Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee
(IACUC)
13Basic Ethical Guidelines (APA)
- Minimize possibility of misleading results
- Protect participants from harm and discomfort
- Obtain informed consent
- Confidentiality concerning participants
- Only use deception if no better alternative is
available - Fully explain research afterwards
14Types of Psychological Research
- Non-experimental methods include
- Correlational studies relationship, not
necessarily causation like an experiment can
show /- - Surveys behaviors, attitudes, opinions, beliefs
be careful of biased questions that skew results
lies - Naturalistic observation natural environment
reduce attention drawn no controls - Longitudinal studies one group followed for
long period accurate - costly and time
consuming - Cross-sectional studies cross section at
specific time less time - not as
accurate - Case studies intensive study useful for rare
or new interests/findings
15Which Method Would You Use?(experiment,
correlational, survey, case study, naturalistic
observation)
- Determining the favorite food of adolescents
- Determining if frustration causes aggression
- Determining if level of education is associated
with crime - Determining how teenagers behave on their first
date - Determining why a housewife gave up a flourishing
career
16Raw Data
- Can be arranged in a summary chart known as a
frequency distribution - Shows how frequently each of the various scores
in a set of data occurs - We can convert the data into a graph called a
histogram - Height of bars indicates the frequency of a group
of scores - Continuous data (age, money)
17Describing the Data With Descriptive Statistics
- Descriptive statistics include
- The mean
- The median
- The mode
- The range
- The standard deviation
- The normal distribution
18Correlation
- Correlation A relationship between two
variables, in which changes in one variable are
reflected in changes in the other variable - Correlation coefficient A number between -1 and
1 expressing the degree of relationship between
two variables - Positive, Negative and Zero Correlations
- Positive variables move in same direction
- Example Time studying and test scores
- Negative variables move in opposite directions
- Example Exercise and heart disease
- (-1)Strong ------------(0)---------
--Strong (1) - Weak
19Inferential Statistics
- Used to assess whether the results of a study are
reliable or whether they might be the result of
chance - Sampling - random and representative samples
- Statistical significance (plt.05) probability
that the difference between 2 variables might be
due to chance is less than 5 - Takes into account sample size, size of
difference, and standard deviation - Means there is a meaningful difference between
groups - Confident that the difference is real and not due
to chance!
20Questions Science Cannot Answer
- The scientific method is not appropriate for
answering questions that cannot be put to an
objective, empirical test - Ethics
- Morality
- Religious beliefs
- Preferences