Title: Psych 231: Research Methods in Psychology
1- Psych 231 Research Methods in Psychology
- Reading the Literature cont.
- Science of Psychology
- Theories in Science
2Announcements
- Library assignment due in lab this week
- Download (full text available at library) and
read the article for lab THIS week (Raz, Kirsch,
Polard, Nitkin-Kaner,2006) - Note the Lab manual exercise mentions a
different article, ignore that one, use the Raz
et al paper - Some of the questions (7-10 in particular) refer
to things in the old article. Dont stress out
about that (ignore them for now, well cover them
in labs) - Quiz 3 due on Monday
- Exam 1 two weeks from today
3The anatomy of a research article
- What's the goal of a research article?
- For the reader to be
- Informed, Understand what was done, and
Convinced - Standardization of research report format
- APA style
- Organization reflects the logical thinking
- Standardization helps with clarity
4The anatomy of a research article
- The basic parts of a research article
- Title and authors - gives you a general idea of
the topic and specifically who did it - Abstract - short summary of the article
- States the issue, the methods, major variables of
interst, the findings, and the conclusions - (in 120 words or less)
- First contact
- Shows up in PsycInfo
- Gets skimmed before reading the article
5The anatomy of a research article
- The basic parts of a research article
- Introduction - gives you the background that you
need - What are the issues
- What is/are the theory(ies)
- What does the past research say
- What is the rationale for doing this research
- What are the specific hypotheses
- Reading checklist
- 1) What is the author's goal?
- 2) What are the hypotheses?
- 3) If you had designed the experiment, how would
YOU have done it?
6The anatomy of a research article
- The basic parts of a research article
- Method - tells the reader exactly what was done
- Enough detail that the reader could actually
replicate the study. - Subsections
- Participants - who were the data collected from
- Apparatus/ Materials - what was used to conduct
the study - Procedure - how the study was conducted, what the
participants did - Reading checklist
- 1 a) Is your method better than theirs?
- b) Does the authors method actually test the
hypotheses? - c) What are the independent, dependent, and
control variables? - 2) Based on what the authors did, what results do
YOU expect?
7The anatomy of a research article
- The basic parts of a research article
- Results - gives a summary of the results and the
statistical tests - Reading checklist
- 1) Did the author get unexpected results?
- 2 a) How does the author interpret the results?
- b) How would YOU interpret the results?
- c) What implications would YOU draw from these
results?
8The anatomy of a research article
- The basic parts of a research article
- Discussion - the interpretation and implications
of the results - Reading checklist
- 1 a) Does YOUR interpretation or the authors'
interpretation best represent the data? - b) Do you or the author draw the most sensible
implications and conclusions? - References - full citations of all work cited
- Appendices - additional supplementary supporting
material
9Psychology as a science
- Write down the names of three scientists
- What field of science do they belong to?
- Write down the name of a famous psychologist
- Do they represent the standard psychologist?
- NO!
- Psychology is a diverse discipline
- ISUs Psych Dept has 6 different groups
- APA has 54 different divisions of psychology
10Psychology as a science
- What is science?
- What are the goals of science?
- Is psychology a science?
- Yes
- Studies the full range of human behavior using
scientific methods - Applications derived from this knowledge is
scientifically based
11Psychology as a science
- Psychologys goals are similar to the goals of
the physical sciences (e.g., physics and
chemistry) - Psychologists are concerned with the behavior of
people (and animals) rather than the physical
world.
- How is psychology different from the physical
sciences? - Human (and animal) behavior is typically much
more variable than most physical systems. - Statistical control
- Methodological control
- Often the thing of interest requires indirect
measurement (and thus underlying assumptions)
125 Goals of psychology
- Description of behavior
- Describe events, what changes what might affect
change, what might be related to what, etc. - Prediction of behavior
- Given X what will likely happen
- Control of behavior
- For the purpose of interventions (e.g., how do we
prevent violence in schools) - Causes of behavior
- Sometimes predictions arent enough, want to know
how the X and the outcome are related - Develop specific theories
- Explanation of behavior
- A complete theory of the hows and whys
13Theories Hypotheses
14Properties of a good theory
- Organizes, Explains, Accounts for the data
- If there are data relevant to your theory, that
your theory cant account for, then your theory
is wrong - Either adapt the theory to account for the new
data - Develop a new theory that incorporates the new
data
15The chicken or the egg?
Theory
Data driven research reasoning from the data
to the general theory
Deduction
Induction
Theory driven research reasoning from a general
theory to the data
Data
- Exclusive reliance on one or the other can be
problematic - Typically good research programs use both
16Properties of a good theory
- Organizes, Explains, Accounts for the data
- Testable/Falsifiable cant prove a theory, can
only reject it
17Omnipotent Theory
- Beware theories that are so powerful/general/flexi
ble that they can account for everything. These
are not testable
18Omnipotent Theory
- Beware theories that are so powerful/general/flexi
ble that they can account for everything. These
are not testable - Karl Popper claimed that Freudian theory isnt
falsifiable - If display behavior that clearly has sexual or
aggressive motivation, then it is taken as proof
of the presence of the Id - If such behavior isnt displayed, then you have a
reaction formation against it. So the Id is
there, you just cant see evidence of it. - So, as stated, the theory is too powerful and
cant be tested and so it isnt useful
19Properties of a good theory
- Organizes, Explains, Accounts for the data
- Testable/Falsifiable
- Generalizable not too restrictive
- The theory should be broad enough to be of use,
the more data that it can account for the better - The line between generalizability and
falsifiability is a fuzzy one.
20Properties of a good theory
- Organizes, Explains, Accounts for the data
- Testable/Falsifiable
- Generalizable
- Parsimony (Occams razor)
- For two or more theories that can account for the
same data, the simplest theory is the favored one
Everything should be made as simple as
possible, but not any simpler.
21Properties of a good theory
- Organizes, Explains, Accounts for the data
- Testable/Falsifiable
- Generalizable
- Parsimony
- Makes predictions, generates new knowledge
- A good theory will account for the data, but also
make predictions about things that the theory
wasnt explicitly designed to account for
22Properties of a good theory
- Organizes, Explains, Accounts for the data
- Testable/Falsifiable
- Generalizable
- Parsimony
- Makes predictions, generates new knowledge
- Precision
- Makes quantifiable predictions
23Next Week
- Download and read the article for lab THIS week
(Raz, Kirsch, Polard, Nitkin-Kaner,2006) - Basic Methodologies
- Making observations and conducting experiments
- Read Chapter 6
- Quiz 3 due on Monday