Problem 1 Flashcards

1
Q

science

A

= a set of methods used to collect info. about phenomena in particular area of interest and to build a reliable base of knowledge about them

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2
Q

empirical evidence

A

= evidence based on observation or experimentation

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3
Q

scientist

A
  • identifies a phenomenon to study, develops hypothesis, conduces a study to collect data, analyses data and disseminates the results
  • has to be skeptical, follow the rules of logic
  • has to follow certain guidelines of scientific methods
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4
Q

confirmation bias

A

= tendency to look for info. that will confirm our prior believes, assumptions and ignore/ downplay info. that doesn’t

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5
Q

psychology

A

= science of behavior and mental processes
major goals:
- build an organized body of knowledge about it’s subjects matter
- describe mental & behavioral processes and develop reliable explanations for these processes

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6
Q

true science

A

= method to obtain info. in research

  1. identifying phenomenon to study
  2. discogering info. about this phenomenon
  3. developing explanations for the phenomenon
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7
Q

protoscience

A

= on the edge of becoming a science;

  • no scientific techniques used
  • -> can drift into pseudoscience if not done properly
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8
Q

pseudoscience

A

= tries to look scientific in order to confine people of reliability (but is not)

–> just promotes/ convinces ideas, but not demonstrates real facts

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9
Q

non-science

A

= academical discipline that supports position through logical argumentation not empirical data (Philosophy)
–> works arguments, no evidence

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10
Q

the scientific method (Braithwait)

A
  1. observing a phenomenon
    (scouting and identification of variables that appear to have important influence on the observed behavior)
  2. formulating tentative explanations
    (development of hypothesis, tentative explanation for the observed behavior)
  3. further observing and experimenting
    (further observation to test the validity of the hypothesis (correlational study, quasi-experimental study or experimental))
  4. analyze the data
  5. report your findings (and invite others to reproduce the results)
  6. refining and retesting explanations
    (generate new, more specific hypothesis or retest the hypothesis)
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11
Q

2 steps for exploring causes of behavior & explanations (Cialdini)

A
  1. scouting
    (systematic observations from naturally occurring behavior from many sources)
  2. trapping
    (identifying that might affect behavior)
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12
Q

scientific method

Which steps do you have to take as a scientist to study a certain topic?

A
  • describe
  • explain
  • predict
  • influence

–> not only want to describe a phenomena (behavior) but be able to really understand it

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13
Q

psychology = science

A

= study of mental processes & behavior of people

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14
Q

theory
vs.
hypothesis

A
  1. = is a plausible explanation of something that has the ability to logically predict
  2. = resembles more an assumption (and can’t be prove that it does not exist)
    - -> hypothesis is more general
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15
Q

main characteristics of scientific explanation

it should be..

A
  • empirical (objective, systematic observation under controlled conditions, verified by others)
  • rational (logic, consistent in known facts)
  • testable/ falsifiable (possible to be proven wrong)
  • parasimonious (fewest number of assumptions)
  • general (broad explanatory power - high external validity)
  • tentative (willing to be proven wrong (provisorisch))
  • rigorously (should be tested continuously for consistency (streng))
  • evaluated (string inference)
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16
Q

biased explanations:

  1. common-sense explanation
  2. belief-based explanation
  3. faulty inference
  4. pseudo-explanations
A
    • based on own sense what true, biased
    • a common form of trusted sources, no evidence required (religion)
    • After making observations many often feel they have to infer the cause (–> possible source for mistake)
    • circular explanation provides an alternative label instead of cause