Title: Chapter 1 Psychology, Science, and Life
1Chapter 1Psychology, Science, and Life
2Why are Research Methods Important Tools for Life?
- Understanding human behavior
- Creating new knowledge
- Preparing for a career in psychology
3Why are Research Methods Important Tools for Life?
- Answering important questions
- What is the biological basis of consciousness?
- How are memories stored and retrieved?
- How did cooperative behavior evolve?
- To what extent are genetic variation and personal
health linked? - What causes schizophrenia?
4Scientific and Nonscientific Knowledge
Way of Knowing What it entails
Tenacity Acceptance of knowledge uncritically and unwillingness to change beliefs
Authority Acceptance of knowledge because it comes from an authority or expert
A priori method Knowledge from logic based on premises that are subject to possible change
Scientific approach Knowledge based on empirically derived data
5What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- Tenacity
- Simply believing something because you don't want
to give up your belief. It may be obvious to you,
even if not to others. - You have probably discovered that people do not
change their minds easily, concluding that they
are simply being stubborn. But they are probably
thinking exactly the same about you
6What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- Authority
- This way of adopting knowledge removes the burden
from any single person to make decisions
instead, one would rely on an expert of some
kind. - Authorities and experts are often right, but they
can be wrong.
7What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- A Priori Method
- People might fix their knowledge based on
consensus and reasoned argument, the a priori
approach. - The problem is that reasons for believing
something may change over time, so what was seen
as true in the past may change.
8What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- The Scientific Method
- If we want to know universal truths, the most
valid approach can be through science, which is
objective and self-correcting. Gradually, we can
accumulate knowledge that is valid and discard
ideas that prove to be wrong. - Unfortunately, some questions cannot be addressed
scientifically.
9What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
Four Characteristics of Scientific Research
ObjectiveClearly specified and well defined
Data drivenConclusions are based on the data
ReplicableOther investigators can repeat the research to see if the same results occur
PublicThe research is made public, in detail, so others can scrutinize it
10What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- Concepts and Measurements are Objective
- Research requires that concepts have objective
definitions and measurements that are well
defined and that anybody can apply.
11What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- Claims Are Data Driven
- Research claims must be based on objective data
rather than on the preferences or initial beliefs
of the researcher.
12What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- Scientific Research is Replicable
- Research has to be set up so that others can
repeat a study to see if the same results occur. - A process is scientific if different scientists
can repeat a study, even if the results differ.
More research can identify why there are
discrepancies.
13What Constitutes Scientific Knowledge
- Scientific Research is Public
- After completing research, scientists make their
work public so other scientists can scrutinize it
and create new research based on it.
14Culture and Ways of Knowing
Culture Example of Characteristic
Eastern Acceptance of contradictory statements as each having partial truth
Western Search for a single correct answer Creation of dichotomies (e.g., It is either this or that it cant be both)
Not all people accept the same type of logical
framework that people do in Western cultures.
15Why We Do Research
- Curiosity and Enjoyment
- Scientific Goals
Scientific Goals of Research
Describing behavior
Explaining Behavior
Predicting Behavior
Controlling Behavior
16Why We Do Research
- Description
- One evening in 1964, a woman named Kitty Genovese
was attacked and murdered while walking home from
work. It was claimed that 38 people saw what was
happening, but nobody helped or called the
police. - Two psychologists (e.g., Latané and Darley, 1970)
wondered why this might happen. Their first step
in understanding this phenomenon was to describe
the behaviors of the bystanders.
17Why We Do Research
- Explanation
- As Darley and Latané noted, when there are more
people around, we are less likely to offer aid. - The researchers called this failure to act
diffusion of responsibility that is, when others
are around, we can pass blame for our inaction to
them, assuming less (or none) for ourselves.
18Why We Do Research
- Prediction
- We can determine those when helping behavior is
likely to occur. - Helping occurs as people try to avoid feeling
guilty or if a person is similar to them. - Helping diminishes if people have been relieved
of guilt.
19Why We Do Research
- Control
- Behaviors in everyday life are seldom controlled
by a single variable, but we can control behavior
to a degree. - We may help others if our mood is positive
because we tend to generalize our good mood to
everything around us - We may help if our mood is negative, but if we
think that helping somebody will improve our mood
20The Interaction of Science and Culture
- The Role of the Government in Science
- A lot of research is funded by the government.
- Some research is applied, with possible
applications. - Some research is theoretical, possibly without
future applications.
21The Interaction of Science and Culture
- Cultural Values and Science
- Researchers are part of the culture and often
study issues that are important in life. - Culture helps determine how scientists conduct
their research.
22ControversyShould women serve on juries?
- Hugo Münsterberg researched the difference
between men and women in the decision-making
process in groups in the early 1900s. - He concluded that women should not serve on
juries because of the way they were influenced in
their decision making.
23ControversyShould women serve on juries?
- Harold Burtt conducted a conceptual replication
of Münsterbergs study a few years later. - Burtt concluded that women were as capable as men
in making decisions.
24ControversyShould women serve on juries?
- Neither Münsterberg nor Burtt seem to have asked
the question of whether men should serve on
juries. - Their assumption throughout the research was that
men were appropriate for juries. - Why? The answer has to do with culture.
25Scientific Literacy
- What is Scientific Literacy?
- A specialized form of critical thinking, that
involves developing clear questions, collecting
and assessing relevant information, identifying
important assumptions, and generating effective
solutions to problems
26Scientific Literacy
- How scientifically literate are Americans?
- Researchers have concluded that about 28 of
Americans are scientifically literate
27Scientific Literacy
- The majority of Americans believe in various
paranormal phenomena even though there is no
systematic evidence for them. - ESP
- Telekinesis
- Ghosts
- Clairvoyance
- Precognition
28Scientific Literacy
- Most psychologists regard these phenomena as
involving pseudoscience. - What is pseudoscience? An area about which
believers claim scientific status but for which
there is no sound scientific evidence.
29Scientific Literacy
How many people believe in pseudoscientific
claims?
30Scientific Literacy
Characteristics of Bogus Science
Claims appear in the popular press rather than in scientific journals
People claim that the scientific establishment is trying to suppress their work.
Independent researchers cannot verify claims
Claims are based on anecdotes rather than on systematic data collection.
Proponents simply assert that the truth has been known for a long time (e.g., centuries) when no current research can document the claims.
31Scientific Literacy
- Junk Science
- When scientists or researchers make claims to
support their own interests, going beyond what
the data support, they are using what is called
junk science. - Courts in the United States may restrict
scientific testimony from so-called experts if
the testimony would constitute junk science.
32ControversyWhat Causes Autism?
- Some nonscientists and physicians claim that the
vaccines that contained mercury were responsible
for autism. - An early report in the British Medical Journal
claimed to have found a link between vaccines and
onset of autism
33ControversyWhat Causes Autism?
- Where did these claims come from?
- The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention recommended removal of mercury from
vaccines because it is poisonous - The CDC did not link the mercury with autism.
- The recommendation was purely preventive.
34ControversyWhat Causes Autism?
- When the CDC made its recommendations, parents
were getting involved in advocating on behalf of
children diagnosed as autistic. - Parents were objecting to a psychoanalytically
based explanation for autism. - Parents favored a medical model.
35ControversyWhat Causes Autism?
- Some people drew the conclusion that mercury in
vaccines was the culprit. - Mercury poisoning leads to symptoms similar to
those of autism - Some activists concluded that the CDC recommended
removing mercury from vaccines because of a
mercury-autism link (which the CDC never made).
36ControversyWhat Causes Autism?
- What is the current consensus about mercury as
the cause of autism? - The original research claims were based on
fabricated research. - Even after mercury was removed from vaccines, the
incidence of autism increased. - Mercury levels are no higher in children
diagnosed as autistic than in typically
developing children.
37ControversyWhat Causes Autism?
- What is the message here?
- Scientific issues reflect issues important in
society. - Research can resolve controversies.
- If people are not scientifically literate, they
can fall prey to claims that are not
scientifically supported.