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Wade ch2

This document discusses key aspects of how psychologists conduct scientific research. It describes the importance of precision, skepticism, reliance on empirical evidence, willingness to make risky predictions, and openness in psychological research. It also outlines different research methods used, including descriptive studies like case studies, observational studies, surveys and tests as well as correlational and experimental methods. Key aspects of experiments like variables, control conditions and random assignment are explained. The document also discusses evaluating research findings using descriptive and inferential statistics and the importance of considering ethics in research involving humans and animals.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
93 views33 pages

Wade ch2

This document discusses key aspects of how psychologists conduct scientific research. It describes the importance of precision, skepticism, reliance on empirical evidence, willingness to make risky predictions, and openness in psychological research. It also outlines different research methods used, including descriptive studies like case studies, observational studies, surveys and tests as well as correlational and experimental methods. Key aspects of experiments like variables, control conditions and random assignment are explained. The document also discusses evaluating research findings using descriptive and inferential statistics and the importance of considering ethics in research involving humans and animals.

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You are on page 1/ 33

How Psychologists

Do Research
Chapter 2
How Psychologists Do
Research

• What makes psychological research scientific?


• Research Methods
• Descriptive studies
• Correlational Studies
• Experiments
• Evaluating the findings
• Keeping the enterprise ethical
Making Psychological Research
Scientific

• Precision
• Scepticism
• Reliance on empirical evidence
• Willingness to make risky predictions
• Openness
Precision

• Theories:
• organized systems of assumptions that purport to explain
phenomena and their interrelationships.
• Hypotheses:
• attempt to predict or account for a set of phenomena; specify
relationships among variables, and are empirically tested.
• Operational definitions:
• define terms in hypotheses by specifying the operations for
observing and measuring the process or phenomenon.
Scepticism

• Scientists do not accept ideas on faith or


authority.
• Scepticism means treating conclusions,
both old and new, with caution.
Willingness to Make “Risky
Predictions”
• Confirmation bias
• Tendency to look for or pay attention only
to information that confirms one’s own
belief.
• Principle of Falsifiability
• A scientific theory must make predictions
that are specific enough to expose the
theory to the possibility of
disconfirmation; that is, the theory must
predict not only what will happen, but
also what will not happen.
Reliance on empirical
evidence

• A scientist relies on
empirical evidence to
determine whether a
hypothesis is true.
Openness

• Scientists must be willing to tell others


where they got their ideas, how they tested
them and what the results were.
• Peer review, publishing and replicating
research gives science a built-in system of
checks and balances.
Descriptive Methods

• Methods that yield descriptions of behaviour


but not necessarily causal explanations.
• Include:
• Case studies.
• Observational studies.
• Psychological tests.
• Surveys.
Case Studies

• A detailed description of a particular


individual being studied or treated which
may be used to formulate broader
research hypotheses.
• More commonly used by clinicians;
occasionally used by researchers.
Observational Studies

• Researchers carefully and systematically observe


and record behaviour without interfering with
behaviour.
• Naturalistic observation
• Purpose is to observe how people or animals
behave in their natural environment.
• Laboratory observation
• Purpose is to observe people or animals in a
more controlled setting.
Psychological Tests

• Procedures used to measure and evaluate


personality traits, emotional states, aptitudes,
interests, abilities, and values.
• Psychological tests can be objective or
projective.
• Characteristics of a good test include:
• Standardization.
• Reliability.
• Validity.
Standardization

• The test is constructed to include uniform procedures


for giving and scoring the test.
• In order to score tests in a standardized way, an
individual’s outcome or score is compared to norms.
• To establish norms, the test is given to a large
group of people who are similar to those for whom
the test is intended.
• By having norms or established standards of
performance, we know who scores low, average or
high.
Reliability

• When constructing a test, the scores


achieved on the test at one time and
place should be consistent with the
scores achieved at another time and
place.
Validity
„ The ability of a test to measure what it was
designed to measure.

• Content validity
• The test broadly represents the
trait in question.
• Criterion validity
• The test predicts other measures
of same trait in question.
Surveys

• Questionnaires and interviews that ask people directly


about their experiences, attitudes, or opinions.
• Should have a representative sample:
• A group of subjects, selected from the population for
study, which matches the population on important
characteristics such as age and sex.
• Popular polls and surveys use volunteers rather than
representative samples.
• Leads to volunteer bias or the belief that volunteers
may differ from those who did not volunteer.
Correlational Studies

• Defining a correlational study


• Understanding directions of correlations
• Reading Scatterplots
• Evaluating Correlations
Correlational Study

• A descriptive study that looks for a consistent relationship


between two phenomena.
• Correlation
• A statistical measure of how strongly two variables are
related to one another.
• Correlational coefficients can range from - 1.0 to 1.0.
• Variables
• Characteristics of behaviour or experiences that can be
measured or described by a numeric scale;
• variables are manipulated and assessed in scientific
studies.
Direction of Correlations

• Positive correlations
• An association between „ Negative
increases in one correlations
„ An association
variable and increases between increases in
in another, or decreases one variable and
in one variable and decreases in another.
decreases in another.
Scatterplots

• Correlations can be represented by


scatterplots.
Explaining Correlations

• Start with 3 variables, (X, Y, & Z) where


X and Y are correlated:
• X might cause Y
• Y might cause X
• X might be correlated with Y, which causes
Z
• Correlations show patterns, not causes
An Experiment

• A controlled test of a hypothesis in which


the researcher manipulates one variable to
discover its effect on another.
• An experiment includes:
• Variables of interest.
• Control conditions.
• Random assignment.
Variables of Interest

• Independent variables are variables the


experimenter manipulates.
• Dependent variables are variables that the
experimenter predicts will be effected by
manipulations of the independent variable
or variables.
Control Conditions

• In an experiment, a comparison condition


in which subjects are exposed to the same
treatment as in the experimental condition.
• In some experiments, the control group is
given a placebo which is an inactive
substance or fake treatment.
Random assignment

• In order for experiments to have


experimental and control groups
composed of subjects similar in
characteristics that may effect their
results, random assignment should be
used.
• Each individual participating in the study
has the same probability as any other of
being assigned to a given group.
Experimenter Effects

• Unintended changes in subject’s behaviour


due to cues inadvertently given by the
experimenter.
• Strategies for preventing experimenter
effects include single and double-blind
studies.
Descriptive Statistics

• Statistical procedures that organize


and summarize research data.
• Examples include:
• Arithmetic mean
• Standard deviation
Inferential Statistics
• Statistical procedures that allow
researchers to draw inferences about how
statistically meaningful a study’s results
are.
• The most commonly used inferential
statistics are significance tests:
• Statistical tests that show how likely a
study’s results occurred merely by
chance.
Choosing the Best
Explanation
• Interpretation of results may depend on
how the research was conducted.
• Cross-sectional studies involve subjects
of different ages being compared at a
given time.
• Longitudinal studies involve subjects who
are periodically reassessed over a period
of time.
Judging the Result’s

Importance
Statistical techniques such as effect size and
meta-analysis can help us determine how
important our findings are
• Effect size is the amount of variance among
scores in the study accounted for by the
independent variable.
• Meta-analysis is a procedure for combining
and analyzing data from many studies. It
determines how much of the variance in
scores across all studies can be explained by
a particular variable.
Ethical Dilemmas

• Ethics Considerations in Human


Research
• Ethics Considerations in Animal
Research
The Ethics of Studying
Humans

• Informed consent
• Prospective participants should receive enough
information to let them decide freely whether to
participate.
• Freedom to withdraw at any time
• Minimize discomfort
• Keep data confidential
• If deception is necessary, debriefing must occur
The Ethics of Studying
Animals

• Animals have always been used in a small


percentage of psychological studies.
• To conduct basic research.
• To discover practical applications.
• To study issues that cannot be studied.
experimentally with human beings.
• To clarify theoretical questions.
• To improve human welfare.

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