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Experimental Psychology PSY 433. Chapter 1 – Explanation in Scientific Psychology. Scientific Curiosity. “…Scientists are willing to go to much greater lengths to satisfy their curiosity than are nonscientists.” Kantowitz et al, pg 5
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Experimental PsychologyPSY 433 Chapter 1 – Explanation in Scientific Psychology
Scientific Curiosity • “…Scientists are willing to go to much greater lengths to satisfy their curiosity than are nonscientists.” Kantowitz et al, pg 5 • Scientists want to know answers but are also willing to tolerate a lack of clear answers. • Skepticism is the philosophical belief that the truth of all knowledge is questionable. • No fact can be known with 100% certainty.
Science vs Non-science • Nonscientific beliefs come from: • Authority -- believe because an authority told you (take it on faith) • Tenacity -- believe in spite of contrary evidence (cling to belief, refuse to change) • A-priori methods -- believe without prior study (believe what seems reasonable) • Scientific beliefs are based on experience. • We can determine the causes of events through observation.
What is a Theory? • A set of related statements that explains a variety of occurrences (Kantowitz) • An interrelated set of concepts used to explain a body of data and make predictions about future expts (Stanovich) • A statement of the probable relationships among a set of abstract variables (Martin) • A set of assumptions about the causes of behavior and the rules that specify how the causes operate (Bordens).
Theories - Properties • Theories help organize large amounts of data. • Theories generate hypotheses (predictions). • Theories help to better understand the world -- we hope to apply (generalize) to new, unstudied situations. • Theories are subjected to empirical test and retained, modified, or rejected.
Theory Modify Theory Prediction Observations Induction and Deduction Deduction Induction
Theories - Evaluation • Does the theory cover everything it should? • Is it concise? • Is it clearly expressed? • Do all the bits of the theory hang together? • Can the theory be tested? • Is there evidence to support the theory? • Does the theory help us think in new and interesting ways?
Intervening variables • Link the IV and DV • Add to the efficiency of theorizing • “Thirst” example from book is an excellent example! • Sometimes called “constructs.”
Psychology and the Real World • Applied research -- solves a specific problem. • Basic research – conducted to answer questions arising from curiosity, to advance understanding of a phenomenon. • Generalization – taking findings from the lab into real-world contexts. • The extent to which this can be done varies. • Human factors, engineering psychology, and other applied fields.