Critical Thinking
-raising hard questions is part of critical thinking
-critical thinking is the process of checking claims, and making judgements based on evidence
ASK THESE QUESTIONS:
1) What am I being asked to believe?
2) What evidence is available to support the claim?
3) Are there other ways of interpreting the evidence?
4) What other evidence would help to examine the alternatives?
5) What are the responsable conclusions?
Theory vs. Hypothesis
-THEORY explanation, can predict and suggest ways of controlling phenomena, can change or be added to with more research, general
EX) Eye movement activate parts of the brain in which bad experiences have been stored but not processed
-HYPOTHESIS clearly states what researchers think may be true, specific testable prediction
EX) EMDR treatment causes significant reduction to anxiety
Operational Defintion
Variable
Data
4 Goals of Research
1) Describe behavior/mental processes
2) Make predictions about them
- naturalistic observation, case studies, surveys, correlations studies
3) Control them
4) Explain how/why they occur
- experiments
Naturalistic Observation
IRB
- experiments must be approved by them
Informed Consent
-participants must know they are being researched and give their permission
Anonymity
-the participants identities must be kept secret
Right To Opt Out
-participant has the freedom to exit the study at any time
Debriefing
-participants must know the purpose of the study and can contact the researchers about study results
Social Desirability Bias
-tendency to answer questions based on what other ppl think is good/acceptable
Wording Effects
-the order of words/which words used can effect participants
Hawthorne Effect
-if you know you are being observed you act differently
Case Study
Survey (Interview/Questionnaire)
5 Steps in the Scientific Method
Empirical
- quantitative data
Longitudinal Study
Population
-total number of people
Random Sample
Correlation Coefficient
Scatter plots