Unit 1 Exam (ch. 1-5) Flashcards
What are the four goals of scientific research?
Description, prediction, determination of cause, and explanation of behavior
What is the scientific approach?
Skepticism: findings must be based on careful logic & scientific study
Empiricism: knowledge based on observations, data, collected & analyzed following rules
Falsifiability: good scientific ideas (theories) can be tested; potentially proven false
Peer Review: scientists evaluate each other’s research
What are pseudoscience characteristics (6)?
Not typically tested
Methodology is not scientific & validity is questionable
Evidence is anecdotal
Ignores conflicting evidence
Vague & appeals to pre-conceived ideas
Claims are never revised
How is applied research and basic research the same?
Not always a clear distinction
Neither is best
Applied research is often guided by basic research
Findings in an applied setting often require more basic research
Basic research is crucial to public policy
What is a theory?
a general set of statements
(rules, assumptions, proportions, or principles) used to explain facts
What do theories do for us?
Allow us to generate hypotheses
Allow prediction
Provide guidance
Stimulate new research
Act as filters
What is a hypothesis?
A testable idea or explanation based on known facts. A research prediction
What sources do people use to “know” about the world?
Authority (believing something because an “expert” said it was true)
Intuition (“hunches,” “It’s just obvious,” “gut feeling”)
What can be sources of ideas (5)?
Common sense
Observation
Past research
Practical problems
Theories
What is the anatomy of a research article?
Abstract
Introduction
Method
Results
Discussion
What are variables?
Any measurable/manipulated characteristics for each participant that can change
What are the four types of variables?
Situational Variables: characteristics of environment or condition (ex: length of words, # of people in room, time of year
Response Variables: variables that depend on the behavior of the participant (ex: reaction time, questionnaire responses)
Participant/Subject Variables: variables that describe the participants (ex: age, gender, socioeconomic status
Mediating Variables: variables that change between other variables (ex: anxiety- the change relationship between test difficulty and performance
What is an operational definition?
A set of procedures to measure or manipulate the concept of interest
What are the three claims?
Frequency claims: focus on a single measured variable (no manipulation) (reported as percentage or amounts)
Association claims: “linked to,” “higher risk,” “correlated with,” “more likely,” “tied to,” “goes with”
Casual claims: two variables, with the suggestion that one causes the other (“causes,” “prevents,” “increases,” “may lead to, ““worsens,”)
What are the relationships between variables?
Positive linear association: variables change in the SAME direction
Negative linear association: variables change in OPPOSITE direction
Curvilinear association: increases in one variable related to both INCREASES & DECREASES IN ANOTHER
No Relationship/No (zero) association: variables do not influence each other