Week 1: Introduction to Research Methods Flashcards
Results from multiple research investigations that provide similar findings
Converging Evidence
The process of applying critical thinking in evaluating the truth of a claim
Skepticism
An article or reference in which the author describes research that has previously been published
Secondary source
An article or reference that describes the results of original research that was conducted by the author(s) of the article
Primary source
The process through which either the original researcher or the researchers from an independent laboratory repeat the investigation and obtain the same or highly similar results
Replication
Scholarly journals whose editors send any submitted article out to be evaluated by knowledgeable researchers or scholars in the same field
Peer-reviewed journals
An approach to thinking about a situation that may lead you to respond in a particular manner that may be flawed
Cognitive bias
Mental shortcuts that assist people in finding adequate but often imperfect solutions to difficult problems
Heuristic
A cognitive bias that leads individuals to attend to only a small amount of information to preserve mental energy
Cognitive miser model
A cognitive process that leads individuals to overestimate the likelihood of events that come easily to mind
Availability Heuristic
A cognitive bias that leads individuals to favour anecdotal evidence over more detailed information that is available
Discounting base-rate information
A heuristic that leads individuals to use a particular value as a base for estimating an unknown quantity and adjust their estimate based on that quantity, even if the value given is entirely arbitrary
Anchoring
A cognitive bias caused by seemingly inconsequential differences in wording in a question or problem that lead respondents to vary their choices
Framing effect
The tendency to assume that two events are causally related because of proximity of time and place, when in fact no such causal relation exists
Causality bias
The tendency to give the most weight to information that supports your theory, potentially discounting or ignoring data that go against your strongly held theoretical bias
Confirmation bias