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Psychological Research. Chapter 2. Complete the following…. Read section 2.1 complete questions 1-4 p. 41 Read section 2.2 complete questions 1-4 p. 45 Read section 2.3 complete questions 1-4 p. 54 Complete Vocabulary (24 words) on p. 55. Research Methods. Naturalistic Observation
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Psychological Research Chapter 2
Complete the following… Read section 2.1 complete questions 1-4 p. 41 Read section 2.2 complete questions 1-4 p. 45 Read section 2.3 complete questions 1-4 p. 54 Complete Vocabulary (24 words) on p. 55
Research Methods Naturalistic Observation Longitudinal Studies Cross Sectional Study Surveys Case Study Correlations & Explanations Experiments
Time to Experiment • Review examples on posters • Identify correct/incorrect examples • Assign Groups • Brainstorm ideas/questions you could answer at WHS • Identify your sample population (Who will you interview? Observe?) • Form Hypothesis • Design your experiment • Conduct your experiment over the next 24 hours—it should be done before you come to class on Wed.
After the Data is collected… Why would it be important to poll a large group of subjects? Why should someone else try to replicate your experiment?
From Ch 2, Section 2 What is a double blind experiment? Why would the FDA require double blind experiments?
Results should be measurable Create a graph(s) to reflect your results so that the information you have gathered can be easily interpreted Calculate the mean, median, mode of your results
Problems in Research Self-fulfilling prophecy—having expectations about a behavior and then acting in some way, usually unknowingly, to carry out that behavior Everyday we give cues to our expectations, but in science that can lead to mistakes This is why single-blind and double-blind experiments are important
Problems in Research Placebo effect—change in a patient’s illness or physical state that results solely from the patient’s knowledge and perceptions of treatment No actual medical effects to cause change
Statistical Evaluation • Descriptive Statistics (p. 48) • Frequency distribution (p. 49) • Normal Curve or bell-shaped curve (p. 51) • Curve is symmetrical • We can divide the curve into sections and predict how much of the curve or what percentage of cases, falls with in each section
Central Tendency • Most common ways of summarizing information • Mean or “Average” score • Mode—most frequent score • Median—Middle score
Measures of Variance Evaluating how spread out the scores are Most common methods—range and standard deviation Range—subtract lowest from highest score and add one Standard deviation is distance from average—spread out scores have high standard deviation, scores that cluster together have low standards of deviation
Correlation Coefficients • Describes the direction and strength of the relationship between two sets of observations • Number will be between +1 and -1 • A scatterplot demonstrates the the direction of the relationship between two variables • Positive Correlation (+) • As one variable increases, the other increases • Negative Correlation (-) • One variable increases while the other decreases
Inferential Statistics Does the data collected support their hypothesis or were the outcomes due to chance? Can use inferential statistics to make generalizations about the population from which the participants come
Ethics • Use APA standards • Have informed consent • Do no harm • Respect the results