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A Brief Review of Chapter 1

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Title: A Brief Review of Chapter 1


1
A Brief Review of Chapter 1
  • Which of the following theoretical approaches in
    psychology emphasized studying only observable
    behavior?
  • Psychoanalytic
  • Humanistic
  • Behaviorism
  • Structuralism

2
A Brief Review of Chapter 1
  • Which of the following contemporary theoretical
    approaches in psychology is similar to
    functionalism?
  • Psychanalytic
  • Humanistic
  • Behaviorism
  • Cognitive

3
A Brief Review of Chapter 1
  • A ________ psychologist would most likely study
    factors that influence persuasion.
  • Personality
  • Social
  • Physiological
  • Clinical

4
A Brief Review of Chapter 1
  • You meet a psychologist who tells you that she
    works for IBM and helps them develop employee
    training and retention programs. What type of
    psychologist is she?
  • Social
  • Counseling
  • Experimental
  • Industrial-Organizational

5
A Brief Review of Chapter 1
  • Contemporary psychologists would most likely
    agree with which of the following statements?
  • We cannot directly assess thinking and should
    only concentrate on studying observable behavior.
  • Heredity plays little to no role is influencing
    human behavior.
  • Culture is a major factor in shaping human
    behavior.
  • Laboratory research cannot reveal much about
    human behavior.

6
PSYC 2201Research in Psychology Chapter 2
Outline for Weiten (2005)
  • Bill Hill
  • Kennesaw State University

7
  • Does a basketball player have a better chance of
    making a shot after having just made his last 2
    or 3 shots than he does after having just missed
    his last 2 or 3 shots?
  • Yes
  • No

8
  • When shooting free throws, does a player have a
    better chance of making his second shot after
    making his first shot than after missing his
    first shot?
  • Yes
  • No

9
  • Is it important to pass the ball to someone who
    has just made several (2, 3, or 4) shots in a
    row?
  • Yes
  • No

10
Survey Data Found
  • Does a basketball player have a better chance of
    making a shot after having just made his last 2
    or 3 shots than he does after having just missed
    his last 2 or 3 shots? Yes 91
  • When shooting free throws, does a player have a
    better chance of making his second shot after
    making his first shot than after missing his
    first shot?
  • Yes 68
  • Is it important to pass the ball to someone who
    has just made several (2, 3, or 4) shots in a
    row?
  • Yes 84

11
Research Data Found
  • The notion that when youre hot, youre hot is
    a myth.
  • Tversky Gilovich (1989) analyzed the shooting
    records of pro basketball teams and found that
    players were equally likely to make a shot after
    a miss as after a basket.
  • They also verified this experimentally using
    varsity members of the Cornell team in a
    controlled shooting experiment.

12
Research, is NOT
  • Personal opinion
  • Anecdotal evidence

13
Goals of Scientific Approach
  • Measurement/Description (REMEMBER EMPIRICAL)
  • Understanding
  • Prediction
  • Application/Control

14
Hypothesis
  • Tentative statement about the relationship
    between 2 or more variables.

15
Variables
  • Measurable
  • May be conditions, events, characteristics, or
    behaviors
  • Can be controlled by the researcher or observed
    in an research study

16
Types of Variables
  • Participant/Subject
  • Representative Sample
  • Environment
  • Stimuli

17
Theory
  • Interrelated ideas or concepts that are used to
    explain a set of observations or research findings

18
Steps in Scientific Research
  1. Develop testable hypothesis
  2. Select research method (which depends on the
    question asked) to design the research study
  3. Collect data
  4. Analyze data draw conclusions
  5. Share results

19
Advantages of the Scientific Method
  • Precision (Operational Definitions)
  • Specificity/Clarity
  • Avoidance of error

20
Research Methods
  • True Experiment
  • Manipulation of variables under controlled
    conditions with random assignment of participants
    and observation/measurement of behavior

21
Research Methods
  • Quasi-Experimental Research
  • Manipulation of an IV and measurement of a DV
    but without random assignment of participants to
    IV conditions

22
Research Methods
  • Experiment
  • IV, Independent Variable(s)
  • DV, Dependent Variable(s)
  • UCV, Extraneous/Uncontrolled Variables
  • Irrelevant
  • Confounding
  • CV, Control Variables

23
Research Methods
  • Experiment
  • Experimental Group
  • Control Group

24
Identify the Variables
  • A researcher is interested in evaluating 3
    different treatments for curing phobias
    (unnatural fears of some object or situation).
    Participants receive one of 3 treatments for a
    period of 3 months. They are then tested for the
    intensity of their fear reaction to their
    particular phobic object or situation. The IV
    is
  • The type of phobia they are suffering from
  • The type of treatment that they received
  • The intensity of the fear reaction after the
    treatment
  • The length of time the treatment was administered

25
Identify the Variables
  • A scientist believes that eating large amounts of
    fiber will prevent cancer of the stomach. To
    prove this, she has a large sample of volunteers
    eat a large bowl of fiber cereal every morning
    for 3 years, while a second group eats no fiber
    for breakfast for 3 years. The control group is
  • The volunteers that ate the fiber cereal
  • The volunteers that ate no fiber cereal
  • There is no control group in this experiment
  • The length of time the experiment was conducted
    (i.e., 3 years)

26
Identify the Variables
  • A psychologist believes that he has developed a
    new teaching method that will produce greater
    learning. To prove this he selects 2
    introductory psychology classes, one taught by
    Professor A and the other by Professor B.
    Professor A uses the new technique, while
    Professor B does not. The average test
    performance at the end of the semester is found
    to be greater for Professor As class. The UCV or
    Confounding variable
  • The teaching technique
  • The subject matter of the course
  • The test performance
  • The professor who taught the course

27
Research Methods
  • Experimental Limitations
  • Artificiality
  • Cannot be used to research some questions
  • Inability to manipulate some variables
  • Experimenter Bias
  • Sampling Bias

28
Research Methods
  • Observational Research
  • Watch and record defined behavior
  • Types of Observational Research
  • Naturalistic
  • Controlled/Lab

29
Research Methods
  • Surveys/Questionnaires/Interviews
  • Set of questions designed to gather
    information about individuals
  • Survey Research Issues
  • Reliability Validity
  • Social Desirability Bias

30
Which Method to Use?
  • Jogging increases lung capacity.
  • Experiment
  • Survey
  • Naturalistic observation
  • Impossible to study scientifically

31
Which Method to Use?
  • More men than women report fantasies of making
    large sums of money.
  • Experiment
  • Survey
  • Naturalistic observation
  • Impossible to study scientifically

32
Which Method to Use?
  • Newborn infants have an innate conception of sin.
  • Experiment
  • Survey
  • Naturalistic observation
  • Impossible to study scientifically

33
Which Method to Use?
  • Unmarried cab drivers talk more with their
    customers than do married cab drivers.
  • Experiment
  • Survey
  • Naturalistic observation
  • Impossible to study scientifically

34
Research Methods
  • Case Study
  • Biographical studyeither as it happens or
    through reconstruction

35
  • Tierney (1987) reported survey results that
    showed that people who often ate Frosted Flakes
    as a child had half the cancer rate of those who
    never ate the cereal. Also, those who ate
    oatmeal as a child were 4 times more likely to
    develop cancer than those who did not eat
    oatmeal. Do these results provide evidence that
    oatmeal causes cancer and Frosted Flakes prevents
    cancer?
  • Yes
  • No

36
Research Methods
  • Correlational Research
  • Attempt to establish whether 2 or more variables
    are related to each other
  • Positive correlation
  • Negative correlation

37
Summarizing Your Results Statistics
  • Descriptive Statistics
  • Measures of Central Tendency
  • Mean, Median, Mode
  • Measures of Variability
  • Inferential Statistics
  • Statistical Significance

38
Avoiding Research Flaws
  • Importance of Replication
  • Sampling Bias
  • Placebo Effects
  • Problems with Self-Reports
  • Experimenter Bias

39
  • Do you place your toilet paper so that it
  • rolls over the spool
  • rolls under the spool

40
  • Do you squeeze the toothpaste from the
  • top
  • middle
  • bottom

41
  • Do you eat corn on the cob
  • in circles
  • side to side

42
  • Do you eat Oreo cookies
  • by twisting the halves apart
  • by smashing them up and adding them to another
    desert
  • whole

43
  • Have you ever seen a ghost?
  • yes
  • no

44
  • Do you skip ahead in a book to find out what will
    happen?
  • yes
  • no

45
  • Have you ever flossed your teeth with a hair?
  • yes
  • no

46
The Survey Results
  1. 68 over the spool
  2. 79 squeeze toothpaste from the top
  3. 80 eat corn on the cob in circles
  4. 50 eat Oreos whole, 18 twist apart, 15 smash
    them
  5. 10 have seen a ghost
  6. 27 skip ahead in a book
  7. 7 have flossed with a hair

47
Weitens Themes
  • Empirical Nature of Y
  • Subjectivity of Experience
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