用户:Grotton JXz Donbrako/Psychology/Chapter 2

来自萌娘文库
< 用户:Grotton JXz Donbrako‎ | Psychology
Grotton JXz Donbrako讨论 | 贡献2022年2月7日 (一) 06:38的版本 (填充正文内容,修改网址方便保存)
跳转至: 导航搜索

页面介绍

本页面所转载文章出自APPsychPrep网站所分享幻灯片[1],由GJD转载。
转载时有改动,无任何原内容省略。

正文

Research Methods

  • "How do you do research in psychology?"
  • Psychology uses the scientific process:
    • Question
    • Hypothesis
    • Prediction
    • Data
    • Interpretation

  • Hindsight bias is the tendency of people to overestimate their ability to have predicted an outcome that could not possibly have been predicted.
  • However, the goal of science is to be predictive; that is, determine an outcome before it happens, not after.

  • Research question:
  • What are some relationships between these variables
    • Coffee intake and running speed?
    • Showering and body odor?
    • Studying and grades?
    • Mass of an object and its gravitational force?

  • Hypothesis: Usually an ‘if, then’ statement or simply a prediction about some event.
    • "If people are given money, they experience greater happiness than if given candy."
    • ↑How do we measure happiness?
  • Independent variable: The variable that influences the dependent variable.
  • Dependent variable: A variable that depends on the independent variable.
  • Theory: aims to explain a broad set of phenomenon.
  • Operational Definitions:Definitions of variables in research need to be quantifiable and observable. They need to be operationally defined.
  • "Research aims to be valid and reliable"
    • Validity refers to whether the research measures what the researchers set out to measure.
      • "If you have a scale, and it says you weigh 100lbs., but on every other scale you step on, the scale says 180lbs., the scale would not be a ‘valid’ measure of your weight."
    • Reliability refers to whether the same results can be produced under similar conditions.
      • "If you stepped on the scale and it said 100lbs., and then five minutes later stepped on the same scale again, and it said 130lbs., the scale would not be a ‘reliable’ measure of your weight."
  • Participants are the people or subjects in your study.
  • Sampling: The selection of participants.
  • Population is the large set of individuals from which a sample was taken.
  • Representative: A sample that accurately reflects the larger population.

  • "Wearing a red shirt in a large crowd gets you more attention."
    • What is my hypothesis?
    • What must be operationally defined?
    • Who is my sample?
    • Who is my population?
    • Is the sample representative?

  • Random Selection means that every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected.
    • How could we randomly select in the previous example?
  • Stratified Sampling: A process that allows a researcher to ensure the sample represents the population on some criteria.
    • If I want to research whether different racial groups respond differently to a survey, I could select 10 Caucasians, 10 Asians, 10 African Americans…

  • Psychologists prefer experiments because they can establish a cause-effect relationship.
    • Laboratory Experiments are conducted in a lab.
    • Field Experiments are conducted in the ‘real’ world. Researchers go out and manipulate some variable and observe the effect.

  • Confounding variable: A confounding variable is any difference between the experimental controls and the control conditions, except for the independent variable, that might affect the dependent variable.
    • A researcher must try to isolate variables or control for “confounding variables”
    • "If I am studying whether the amount of time spent studying is associated with better grades, what are variables that may influence this relationship other than studying?"


(待补充)


原幻灯片(.ppsx)下载链接
(建议在下载后将后缀改成.ppt以方便观看与编辑)